> k w s Dancers win national title University, page 2 #1 UT swim team wins nationals A A r t Dog racing in Nuevo Laredo Images, page 16 Th e Daily i ex a n Scarborough accused of campaign violations (USPS146-440)_________ The student newspaper of the University of Texas at Austin Monday, March 19,1984 Vol. LXXXIII, No. 114 25c would say that some are blatantjy false and others need explanation to the Judicial C om m ission.” Natural sciences senator Mike Hiller, a supporter o f presidential can­ didate Rodney Schlosser, filed the ac­ cusations March 9. Hiller, a senior, said Sunday he did not lodge the com ­ plaint because Scarborough was an­ other presidential candidate. “ The reason that I’m calling atten­ tion to them is not to discredit Scott’s campaign,” Hiller said. Meg Brooks, Schlosser’s campaign manager, said the complaints were brought to her and she asked Hiller to file diem because it would not be ap­ propriate for her to take action. “ There were too many violations for me not to do anything about it,” said Brooks, a government junior. “ We're not doing this as an attack on Scott because he's another candi­ date.” Brooks said it is important the Judi­ cial Commission upholds the election code. “ Our appeal does not ask for a disqualification, but we do ask for some sort o f remedy that will do something. We don't want just a slap on the w rist.” Brooks, Hiller, Scarborough and Schlosser said they would not discuss the nature o f the complaints until after the hearing. Mike Kelly, a Plan II junior and member o f the newly created Election Supervisory Board responsible for overseeing administrative matters, said the accusations represent the only complaint involving campaign viola­ tions that will go beyond the board to the commission. The board is a subcommittee o f the Judicial Commission, which oversees all student government elections. “ The remedy sought will be above our authority,” Kelly said. “ So w e’re going to pass it on to the commis­ sion.” Kelly said there were reports o f posters taken down or placed on top o f other posters. He said these complaints were investigated, that were but because no consistent offender was found, no action was taken. Schlosser, an advertising junior, received 2,219 votes, while Scarbor­ ough garnered 1,746. Neither candi­ date received a majority. A runoff election between Scarbor­ ough and Schlosser will be Wednes­ day. Scarborough said he had been hop­ ing for a runoff so he could better or­ ganize his campaign. “ We were out-organized the first couple o f w eeks,” Scarborough said. “ We were glad for the extra week to have a little more organization going into the runoff.” Schlosser said Sunday he is also happy to have the extra time. “ The nice thing about the runoff is it gives me 72 more hours to go out and listen and talk,” Schlosser said. “ The run­ off is three more days o f open fo­ rum.” Both candidates said their cam­ paigning this week will be aimed toward better students about their goals. informing “ W e’ll be trying to highlight some specific programs we'll offer,” Scar­ borough said. “ We had complaints that we haven't been specific enough. W e’ll try and pour out the specifics and just hope we don't bore people with details.” By SHARLET WAGNER Daily Texan Staff The Judicial Commission will hold a hearing Monday night to discuss a complaint o f campaign violations filed against Students’ Association presi­ dential candidate Scott Scarborough. The complaint accuses the Scarbor­ ough campaign o f committing six campaign violations, relating to the March 7 and 8 student government election. Scarborough, who would not comment on the nature o f the com ­ plaints Sunday, said the accusations as stated in the complaint are not val­ id. “ They claim six violations,” said Scarborough, an accounting junior. “ I Móndale, Hart feud in Illinois United Press International Walter Móndale and Gary Hart clashed Sunday night over political endorsements, which the senator from Colorado charged would bind the for­ mer vice president to “ old arrange­ m ents.” Móndale, Hart and Jesse Jackson participated in a three-way debate in Chicago, just two days before Tues­ day's crucial Illinois primary in which 171 delegates are up for grabs Responding to a question. Hart said endorsement by Cook Móndale s County Democratic Chairman Edward Vrdolyak “ is somewhat symbolic of the differences in this cam paign.” He told a television audience that they must consider whether a “presi­ dent ... old arrange­ m ents.” is bound by Móndale defended his support by the council leader, who has been locked in a bitter struggle with Chica­ go Mayor Harold Washington, say­ ing. “ I’m glad to have everybody’s support, including Mr. Vrdolyak.” “ I’m not running for alderman. I’m running for president o f the United States," Móndale said, trying to keep him self out o f the city’s political feud. Hart has been hammering away at Móndale s link to Vrdolyak, who now controls the remnants o f former Chi­ cago Mayor Richard D aley’s ma­ chine. in hopes o f undercutting Mon- dale’s support among blacks. Móndale, referring to Hart, said during the debate “ there is a differ­ ence between the two o f us” in the level o f intensity o f each man’s com ­ mitments to civil rights. Hart replied that his commitment “ is as broad and deep” as Mondale’s. Jackson said what is needed is not new programs, but a commitment to empower blacks and poor to make programs to help themselves. Móndale won 48 more delegates Sunday in the Puerto Rico primary, swamping Hart, who did not compete on the island. Móndale got 99 percent o f the popular vote and took all the delegates from the start o f vote-count­ ing. The Puerto Rican win gave Món­ dale 525 national convention dele­ gates, 26.7 percent o f the number needed to win the nomination. Hart’s backers conducted rival cau­ cuses and chose delagates pledged to the Illinois senator in hope o f chal­ lenging a Móndale delegation to the July national convention. The Illinois primary wraps up the first phase o f the Democratic nomina­ tion contest, which began Feb. 20 with eight candidates in the field and Móndale regarded as the prohibitive favorite. Caucuses and primaries for the next month are more evenly spaced than they were in the first hectic period, with N ew York and Pennsylvania of­ fering the biggest prizes during April. Móndale, in high spirits as he cam­ paigned in Waukegan, north o f Chica­ go, held up for camera crews a copy o f Sunday’s Chicago Sun-Tim cs with a banner headline, “ Móndale Picks Up Steam .” He boned up for the debate after going to St. Dismas Catholic Church, frequently a stopover for politicians. Ballots not secret, student charges By DAVID NATHER Daily Texan Staff The Students’ Association election of March 7 and 8 is being challenged by a student who has written to the three-member Election Supervisory Board requesting that the election be invalidated. The board is a subcommittee of the Judicial Commission, which oversees all campus elections. Frank Proschan, graduate student in anthropology, is questioning the prac­ tice o f requiring students to supply their Social Security numbers on the ballots. In a letter to the board, Pros­ chan said this violates two sections of the Privacy Act o f 1974. “ Beyond the legal violations, ho w ­ ever, the Students’ Association’s re­ quirement that ballots be identified by a unique identifier is a shocking viola­ tion o f the American democratic tradi­ tion of the secret ballot,” Proschan stated in the letter dated March 13. “ Requiring a unique identifier on one’s ballot is more in the spirit of ‘ 1984’ than it is in the spirit of 1776. “ I hereby request that the election and its results be invalidated, that the ballots be destroyed forthwith and that the election code be revised to bring it into conformity with law and tradi­ tion,” Proschan wrote. Proschan said Friday he is one of several students challenging the elec­ tion results for various reasons. “ I’m not assuming it’s a closed case,” Proschan said. He said while the Election Supervisory Board has not yet responded to his letter, he hopes it will have a chance to respond and “ bring this to a satisfactory reso­ lution.” Gwen Thompson o f the Election Supervisory Board said the board will meet Monday to discuss the chal­ lenges. Natural sciences senator Mike Hiller said student elections have been challenged in the past. “ I don’t recall any situation in which the results had to be overturned,” Hiller said Sun­ day. Association vice president Trevor Pearlman cited the recent challenge of the original proposal requiring a mini­ mum 20 percent voter turnout to vali­ date student government elections, charging that the wording o f the origi­ nal proposal was unclear and therefore misleading. A reworded proposal was passed March 8 by a one-vote margin. Hiller said students challenging election results present the appeal to the Judicial C o m m issio n , w hich then hears ap p ro v es or and dism isses the challenge. case the If the election already is v alidated at the tim e, H iller said, the student to the A ppellate C o u rt, can appeal w hich co nsists o f faculty m em bers and students a ppointed by S chool o f Law D ean John Sutton. T he court is the last step before reaching the a d ­ m inistration, w hich has the final say, H iller said. P roschan said his c o m p la in t is a general reaction to being asked to give his Social Security num ber. is purpose “ T he nu m b er e xists fo r a v er\ sp e ­ cific frequently and m is u se d ,” Proschan said. “ It is tu rn ­ ing into a national ID p ro g ram , w hich not only 1 think is u n -A m erican , but also C ongress has hinted at som e points that it is u n -A m e ric a n .” P roschan said his c oncern stem m ed from the fact that all students are re ­ q uired to pay for student go v ern m en t as part o f their fee bill. “ Since it’s a gam e we all have to play w h eth er we w ant to o r n o t,” P roschan said, “ it should m aintain the highest standards o f dem o cracy and e th ic s .” H iller said the n um ber used on the ballots w as the stu d e n t’s U T id en tifi­ cation num ber. “ It is. p erh ap s, u n fo r­ tunate that the U T ID nu m b er is the sam e as the Social Security n u m b e r,” he said. “ I understand his c o n c e rn ,” H iller said. “ (B ut) the intent w as sim ply to check to see that the student d id n ’t vote tw ice, and that the student is in fact enrolled at the U n iv e rsity .” P earlm an said the Judicial C o m m is­ sion had c onsidered the im plications w hen d esigning the new election sy s­ tem . “ T he c oncern that this g e n tle ­ m an e xpressed is one that I, p e rso n al­ ly, and o ther c o m m issio n m em bers had considered b e fo re ,” he said S u n ­ day. “ In form ulating this type o f sy s­ tem , we w ere very careful not to violate stu d e n ts' privacy in any w a y ,” Pearlm an said. “ T he Judicial C o m ­ m ission w ent to great lengths to e n ­ sure that the Social S ecurity num ber not be identified w ith the v o te r.” A runner’s paradise Jim Sigmon, Daily Texan Staff Hundreds o f runners wait in lines to use the port-a-potty’ at 15th Street and Congress Avenue before the start o f the annual Capitol 10,000 foot race Sunday. The race was won by Sam Sitonik, a former UT cross country and track star, while Lynn Huntington o f Houston placed first in the wom en’s division. Group suing University over demonstration rules By d o n McCa r t h y and SHARLET WAGNER Daily Texan Staff The Austin chapter o f the Committee in Soli­ darity with the People o f El Salvador filed a lawsuit last week against the University, chal­ lenging restrictions placed on its scheduled Thursday demonstration against Henry Kiss­ inger. Malcolm Greenstein, attorney for CISPES, said the University sent a letter to the group March 7 informing them its demonstration must be silent and that the University must approve any literature to be distributed. The letter also said non-students would not be permitted to dis­ tribute leaflets. CISPES is contending the regulations are un­ constitutional, Greenstein said. Kissinger, former U .S . secretary o f state and head o f the National Bipartisan Commission on Central America, is scheduled to speak at the LBJ auditorium Thursday as part of the Univer­ sity’s Presidential Library Conference on the Public and Public Policy. President Reagan created the 12-member commission last July to make long-range policy recommendations. In January the commission suggested that the United States increase mili­ tary aid in the region by $8 billion over a five- year period. Kissinger dissented from the commission ma­ jority, which said that additional military aid to El Salvador should be directly linked to human rights progress. Kissinger’s faction warned there’s an unacceptable risk that withholding all such aid to that country on grounds o f rights abuses could lead to a communist takeover. CISPES is a registered student organization. About 10 other campus groups have joined CISPES as co-sponsors o f the demonstration. A hearing on CISPES’ request for a tempo­ rary restraining order against the University was to have been heard Monday by Judge Harley Clark o f 250th District Court, but a University request to have jurisdiction over the case switched from state to federal court was granted by U .S. District Court Friday afternoon. UT administrators said Sunday they did not know why the University wanted a change of jurisdiction. UT attorney Francie Frederick de­ clined to comment on the reason for the move saying “ it is improper for me to discuss.” Greenstein said he expects a hearing on the restraining order request will be scheduled Mon­ day for early this week. The restrictions are based on policies in the University’s General Information Bulletin, said Glen Maloney, student development specialist for the University. But the bulletin specifically does not mention the restrictions o f silence and non-student distri­ bution of literature. It does state all literature to be distributed must be deposited with the Office o f the Dean of Students and that an application for use o f facili­ ties can be denied if University officials believe the proposed use would disrupt or disturb regu­ lar academic or institutional programs. Ronald Brown, UT vice president for student affairs, said law has given the University the right to regulate the time, place and management o f activities on campus. But Greenstein said Sunday: “ I understand speech as including verbal communication. That historically has been speech. It is a very clear, clean violation o f the First Amendment.” Maloney said, “ Vocal speech is fine, but this vocal speech will interfere with other University activities.” Page 2/The PaBy Texan/Monday, March 19,1984 UNIVERSITY Enrollment up among minorities By JILL KHIEW Daily Texan Staff The final student population count for the spring sem ester shows a slight decrease of nine-tenths o f 1 percent, figures released by the Office o f Insti­ tutional Studies indicate. A total of 44,725 students are regis­ tered at the University, 409 fewer than last spring’s figure of 45,134. The en­ rollment figures show 34,160 under­ graduate students, 9,015 graduate stu­ dents and 1,550 students enrolled in the School o f Law. This is the second drop since the University im plem ented new adm is­ sion criteria in fall 1982. The more stringent adm ission standards were designed to reduce the skyrocketing enrollm ent rates the University experi­ enced in fall 1980 and 1981. " W e don’t have the physical facili­ ties to cater to so many students,” said Ronald B row n, UT vice president for student affairs. “ Enrollm ent fig­ ures would have gone way past 50,000 without the enrollm ent m an­ agement program .” Brown said the U niversity is still trying to increase its physical facilities to keep up with the enrollm ent rate. He said the U niversity hopes to stabil­ ize approxim ately 46,000. enrollm ent at D espite the falling enrollm ent rate, in­ the female enrollm ent rate has creased, said Irm gard B erry, assistant director o f the O ffice o f Institutional Studies. W ith the exception o f last year, the fem ale enrollm ent rate has steadily increased over the past few years, Berry said. A total o f 20,488 fem ales and 24,237 males are registered at the U niversity, com pared to last spring's figures o f 20,574 and 24,560 respec­ tively. Although the figure decreases in absolute term s, the rate is rising as a percentage o f total enrollm ent, Berry said, adding the fem ale enrollm ent figure this spring represents a two- tenths of 1 percent increase over last spring’s. C orrespondingly, male en­ two- rollm ent tenths of 1 percent. figure has dropped Since the overall enrollm ent figure is decreasing, the male and female en­ rollm ent figure will also drop, Berry said. Enrollment am ong blacks, Hispan- ics, Asian A m ericans and foreign stu­ dents also shows a slight increase this spring, while that o f Caucasians de­ creased. T he am ong A merican Indians is steady. enrollm ent The breakdow n by race is as fol­ lows: • 35,313 w hites, dow n 1.5 percent from 36,281 in spring 1983 • 1,336 blacks, up tw o-tenths of 1 percent from 1,227 • 3,733 H ispanics, up two-tenths of I percent from 3,668 • 1,069 Asian A m ericans, up five- tenths of 1 percent from 874 • 78 American Indians, as com ­ pared to 80 • 3,196 foreign students, up five- tenths of 1 percent from 3,004. NEWS IN BRIEF Student candidates prepare for debate in Texas Union S tudents' A ssociation presidential candidates Scott Scarborough and Rodney Schlosser will participate in a debate at noon M onday in the Texas Union Building Board of Directors Room. Scarborough and Schlosser will face each other in a runoff election W ednesday. The debate will follow a “ Meet the P ress” format with both candidates responding to questions from three m em bers o f the staff o f The Daily Texan. Asking the questions will be Texan Editor Roger Cam pbell, reporter Jim ­ my Munoz and Editorial Page Editor David W oodruff. The candidates also will respond to questions from the audience. Cactus adviser awarded Jerry T hom pson, yearbook advisor at the U niversity, has been awarded the C olum bia Scholastic Press A ssoci­ ation C ertificate o f Merit. The presented award was to Thom pson and 12 other individuals M arch 16 at the sixth annual College Press C onvention in New York City. The convention is co-sponsored by the association and College Media A dvi­ sors Inc. Thom pson was comm ended for his w ork on The Cactus and Peregrinus. C ertificate of Merit honorees are selected by a panel of representatives from the field o f student journalism . N om inations are solicited from jo u r­ nalism educators the country. from across Thom pson was awarded the 1978 D istinguished Y earbook A dvisor Award by the National Council of C ollege Publications Advisors. UT hosts symposium The College o f Engineering will host a two-day sym posium on m inori­ ties in engineering M onday and Tues­ day in the Joe C. Thompson C onfer­ ence Center. The Southwestern Symposium on M inorities in Engineering is expected to attract industry personnel, college adm inistrators, public school offi­ cials, adm inistrators of educational systems and others interested in the recruitm ent of minorities in engineer­ ing. President Peter Flawn will kick off the sym posium with an 8:30 a.m . ad­ dress M onday. Following Flawn will be keynote speaker John Bookout, president of Shell Oil C om pany and vice-chairman o f the Southwestern Region of the Na­ tional Action Council for M inorities in Engineering (N A CM E), who will speak at 8:45 a.m . Monday. The sym posium is sponsored by the UT College of Engineering, the Texas A lliance for M inorities in Engineering and NACM E. Law professor honored Roy M ersky, professor of law and director o f the Tarlton Law Library at the UT School o f Law, has been elect­ ed a m em ber o f the American Law Institute. Election to A LI, a body o f about 1,900 leading judges, lawyers and law teachers who are interested in im prov­ ing legal scholarship and the law, is one of the highest honors in the legal profession. M ersky, who is on leave from his position to serve as visiting director of the library at New York Law School in New York C ity, has been on the UT law school faculty since 1965. Prior to com ing to the University, M ersky was the law librarian at the U niversity of C olorado, chief o f the readers and reference service for the Y ale law library and director of the W ashington State Law Library. POLICE REPORT In the period beginning 3 p.m. Friday and ending 3 p.m. Sunday, the University Police Department reported the following incidents: Burglary: Two UT students reported the burglary of several articles of clothing at 4:10 p.m. Friday from their room in Kinsolving Dormitory. Estimated value of the clothing was $150. Criminal tresspass: A non-student was ar­ rested for criminal tresspass at 10:40 p.m. Friday in Beauford H Jester Center. A war­ rant check revealed an outstanding Austin Police Department traffic warrant. The sub­ ject was transported to the Travis County Jail. Theft: A non-student reported the theft of several personal items during a Saturday per­ formance of the Abstin Ballet Theater at the Performing Arts Center. Travis Spradling, Daily Texan S taff UT Dance Team members exhibit their championship form at the Mariott Hotel Sunday. The team will represent the U.S. in a world competition. UT Dance Team to represent U.S. at world championship competion By RICK GONZALES Daily Texan Staff Seven years ago they were just a group of UT students in an infor­ mal class with sim ilar interests. in they’re country at what they do. the best Now the The UT Dance Team placed first at the United States A m ateur B all­ room Cham pionships Feb. 25 in G lendale, C alif., qualifying it to represent the United States at the W orld Formation C ham pionships in Dusseldorf, W est G erm any in December. “ They did much better than ex­ said Larry Lawrence, pected,” their part-time instructor. real “ W e’re said Charlie Santos, one o f the dancers and a sociology senior. ex cited ,” Sunday night at the M arriott H o­ tel the team perform ed its seven- minute Latin ballroom formation c h o reo g rap h ed by L aw ren ce, which won the national title. Eight couples perform ed the five dances involving five different styles: the samba, the rum ba, the cha cha, the paso doble and the jive. “ I think they’ll do very well (in they coop erate,” if G erm any), Lawrence said Friday. In G lendale, near Los A ngeles, the team scored 97 out o f a possi­ ble 100 points with three o f the five perfect scores. “ It’s unheard o f ,” said Jana Edwards, the team ’s chair­ woman and a journalism junior. aw arding judges At the world cham pionships the UT Dance Team will face the well- executed precision of» the Germ an team , toughest com petitor, Lawrence said. its In May 1982 at the British Open C hampionships in Blackpool, Eng­ land, the team placed second with the same formation. “ The director (of the British Open C ham pionships) said they’re the first American team that’s had the world any potential cham pionship,” Lawrence said. team has ever “ No American placed first or seco nd.” to win Unlike the world cham pion­ ships, any am ateur or professional dancer who entered could compete in the British O pen, said Cindy Carreles, the team ’s form er chair­ w oman and public relations junior. “ Every time they seem unpre­ pared, they w in ,” Lawrence said. “ Luck is with us more than tal­ e n t.” “ It’s going to be a lot o f w o rk ,” Carreles said. “ W e’ve been pretty lucky.” Though the UT Dance Team qualified in G lendale to represent the United States in W est G erm a­ ny, it might not be able to get there to com pete. “ It’s no free trip ,” Lawrence said. “ It all depends on m o ney.” To go to D usseldorf the team plans to raise $35,000, Edwards said. “ W e’re ready to get some University support.” “ The foreign team s are govern­ m ent-sponsored,” Carreles said. “ W e’re not sponsored by anyone. W e do everything ourselves.” A nother team dancer, special education junior Susan Castro, said the team is trying to get the U ni­ versity to recognize it The UT Dance Team gets practi­ cally no University support, E d­ them ­ wards said. The dancers selves run the entire organization. The support they do get com es from the Division o f Recreational Sports, but they raise most of their own funds through benefit perfor­ mances. To go to California in February the team raised $2,000 from per­ formances. The rem aining $2,000 “ came out o f our own p ockets,” Edwards said. They have until December to raise the money. As for now they are retraining and recruiting new members. “ W e’re going back to the ba­ sics,” Santos said. “ W e re really working h a rd .” Auditions for the team will be W ednesday, Thursday and Friday in Anna Hiss G ym nasi­ um. Chancellor’s early resignation swiftens selection search By SHERRI CUNNINGHAM Daily Texan S taff The early resignation o f UT System C hancellor E. Don W alker will expe­ dite the search process for a new chan­ cellor and may result in the UT Sys­ tem Board o f Regents receiving a final list o f candidates at its April board meeting, the executive secretary to the board said Friday. Arthur Dilly said the special chan­ cellor advisory com m ittee would not omit any steps in the selection pro­ cess, but “ may just move forward XThe regents) wouldn't pick someone that couldn't be aboard fo r a year, but one or two months wouldn't make any difference. The board is looking for a quality individual.' — Arthur Dilly with a greater sense o f urgency.” “ The com m ittee would certainly like to (give the candidate’s nam es) at the April board m eeting, and the board would like to receive th em ,” Dilly said, o resign Sept. 1, one year earlier than planned. He will becom e the execu­ tive director o f the Herm ann Hospital Estate in Houston. W alker was ap­ pointed UT System chancellor in O c­ tober 1978. W alker announced Tuesday he will W alker could not be reached for comment. The regents are expected to choose a new chancellor by late summer. Dil­ ly said it is important to have a new chancellor identified by that time so negotiations with that person can be­ gin. “ (The regents) wouldn’t pick someone that couldn’t be aboard for a year, but one or two months wouldn’t make any difference,” Dilly said. “ The board is looking for a quality individual.” The nine-member committee will give the regents a list o f the three to five individuals most qualified for the position. W alker said he had planned to retire after leaving the chief executive office o f the UT System but could not refuse the opportunity offered by the Board o f Trustees o f the Hermann Hospital Estate. W alker will continue his associa­ tion with the UT System in his new position because the hospital is the primary teaching facility o f the UT Health Science C enter at Houston. AROUND CAMPUS Around Campus is a daily column listing University related activities. The deadline for submitting items is 1 p.m. the day before publication. No exceptions will be made. ANNOUNCEMENTS Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority and Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity will sell tickets to the Alpha Ball from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday in the Beauford H. Jester Center lobby. Tick­ ets are $25 per person and $40 per cou­ ple. The Recreational Sports Outdoor Program will sponsor a canoe clinic at 5:15 p.m. March 27 at Red Bud Isle in Town Lake. For more information, call 471-1093. El grupo de Danza Arte Folklórico de UT will conduct dance practice from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Monday through Friday in Anna Hiss Gym 139. The Learning Skills Center (RASSL) will conduct registration for classes in study techniques, college reading skills, speed reading and stop­ ping procrastination from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday in Beau­ ford H. Jester Center A332. For more information, call 471-3614. The College of Liberal Arts and the Undergraduate Library will sponsor a poetry reading by Harryette Muellen as a Ruth F. Stephan Poetry Reading at 12:15 p.m. Monday in Academic Center 344. The Department of Music will spon­ sor a recital by soprano Barbara Honn, accompanied by pianist David Garvey, at 8 p.m. Monday in Music Building Recital Hall West. The Union Dancers will sponsor an “ Old Timey” square dance to live mu­ sic at 8 p.m. Monday in the Texas Un­ ion Building Eastwoods Room. Every­ one is invited, and admission is free. The Measurement and Evaluation Center is offering tests for credit in English 307/308 and History 315K and 315L at 6:30 p.m. March 28. Students may register for the English test from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1:30 to 4 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday and for the history test from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1:30 to 4 p.m. March 28. Reg­ istration must be done at the Measure­ ment and Evaluation Center, 2616 Wichita St. Each test costs $37. For more information, call 471-3032. MEETINGS The Texas Union Dining Services Committee will meet at 3:30 p.m. Mon­ day in Texas Union Building 4.102. People Aj linst Harriers will meet at 6 p.m. Tuesday in the Beauford H. Jest­ er Center West first floor lounge. University Alcoholics Anonymot t meets from noon to 1 p.m Monday through Friday in Business Administra- tion-Economics Building 360. The University Residence Halls As­ sociation will meet at 6:30 p.m. Mon­ day in the Men’s Residence Halls Recre­ ation Room. Anyone living in campus dormitories is encouraged to attend. The Association of Texas Profes­ sional Educators will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in Education Building 104. Featured will be a speaker on assertive discipline. Circle K will meet to discuss final preparations for the convention and can­ didates for district office at 7 p.m. Mon­ day in Pharmacy Building 2.110. LECTURES/FILMS The School of Architecture will sponsor a lecture by Tod Williams of Tod Williams and Associates, New York City, entitled “ Maker, Marker” at 2 p.m. Monday in Music Building Re­ cital Hall 2.104. The Departments of Lingustics and Psychology will co-sponsor a colloqui­ um with Bjom Lindbiom, research pro­ fessor, Department of Linguistics, Stockholm University, entitled “ The Speech Homunculus and Some Phono­ logical Universals” at 3 p.m. Monday in the Texas Union Building Eastwoods Room. The Department of Petroleum En­ gineering will sponsor a seminar with Luis Ayestaran on “ The Schlumberger Repeat Formation Tester” at 3 p.m. Monday in Petroleum Engineering Building 311. The Institute of Latin American Studies Students’ Association will present a film entitled “ Battle of Chile” at 7 p.m. Monday in Robert A. Welch Hall 1.308. The Center for European Studies and the Department of Germanic Languages will co-sponsor a lecture by Per Ahlmark, former Swedish deputy {Mime minister and minister of labor, en­ titled “ Sweden and the Middle East” at 3:30 p.m. Monday in Batts Hall 201. Brian Bamaud TSP board of trustees certifies 11 candidates By CAROL PEOPLES Daily Texan Staff The Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees certified 10 students as candidates for TSP board positions and one student as a candidate for Daily Texan editor. TSP publishes The Daily Texan, Cactus yearbook. UTmost magazine, Peregrinus law school yearbook and the Official Directory. TSP elections are March 28, and runoffs, if neces­ sary, will be April 4. The board certified David Wood­ ruff, Plan II junior, as a candidate for Texan editor. “ I’m confident that David Wood­ ruff will be an outstanding editor." TSP Board President Steve Rudner said March 9. " I ’m sure David will be responsive to the needs of the stu­ dents.” Woodruff said he will use the cam­ paign period to hear student ideas and opinions concerning the Texan. Under TSP campaign requirements. Wood­ ruff also will wnte editorials for publi­ cation in the Texan before the elec­ tion. “ I’d be lying if I said 1 was sorry no one else decided to run,” Wood­ ruff said Sunday. ‘‘But I’m going to talk to as many people as possible dur­ ing the next two weeks, to hear what students think about what the Texan should b e.” TSP board candidates for a two- in journalism/advertising year term Place 1 are Elizabeth Glenewinkel and Michelle Washer. Candidates for a one-year term in the at-large Place 2 position are David Anderson, Joan Holland, Morris Landau, Chris Luna and Alese Williams. Running for a two-year term in journalism/advertising Place 3 are Jeff Siptak and Diane Tobias. Jamie Turner, already a board member, is running for a two-year term in jour­ nalism/advertising Place 4. " I ’m overwhelmed that we have three out of four contested elections,” Rudner said. “ Generally that has not been the case. I think the wave of stu­ dent apathy is receding.” Rudner said the number of students running for TSP positions this year has increased because of new cam­ paign guidelines. TSP candidates no longer are al­ lowed to spend any personal money on their campaigns. “ The TSP board wants its members to be selected on the basis of their merits,” Rudner said. A free press: Your key to freedom. TEXAS UNION PHOTO SERVICE FILM DEVELOPING SPECIALS C 41 C o l o r P r i n t Fil m O n l y ) . • i l S2.60 $3.70 ' dlSC ■ GE $4.70 $6.40 - : E - m j RE 36 E x p o s u r e Offer Expires 3-23-84 Texas Union Inform ation Lobby Texas Union T h e Daily Te x a n V1 VI HIM 161II SVSTv ...................................................... Editor.................................... Managing Editor Associate Managing Editors Roger Campbett David Lindsey .................................................................. Hector Cantu, Tracy Duncan, Eddie Perkins, Herb Benenson Scott Williams News Editor................................................................................................................... Paul de la Garza Associate News Editor..................................................................... University Editor Jim Purcell General R e porter................................................................................................................................. JobnJenks Tela Goodwin. David Woodruff Editorial Page Editors Sports E d ito r .................. Associate Sports E d ito r ............................................................................................................ Brad Townsend General Sports Reporters Entertainment Editor........................................... Entertainment/Images Assignments Editor Images Editor............................................................................................................ Associate Images Editor Graphics Editor Photo Editors ............................................................. Mike Blackwell. Ed Combs, Stan Roberts Russell Scott Lisa Brown-Richau Dan Pickens G.W Babb Morris Goen, Jim Sigmon ..................................................................................................... Richard Stub! . Issue Staff News Assignments Editor News Assistants Newswnters David Elliot Sherri Cunningham. Sarah Duke Shartet Wagner. David Nather, Jill Khiew. Anne Maschka. Rick Dyer, Carol Peoples, Don McCarthy, Lisa Baker Rick Rutledge Editonal Assistant Chris Boyd Editorial Columnist....................................................................................... Jay Bemanke Sports Make-up Editor Blesener General Sports Reporter David DuBose Sports Assistant Cynthia Walker Make-up Editor Wire Editor Mike McAbee Copy E d ito rs ................................................................................................... Kevin Roberts, Suzanne Gamboa Travis Spradlmg P h o to g ra p h e r.................. Leslie Mann Carolyn Mangold Julie Gullat Emie Palla Glen Diamond Display Advertising Kelly Kohlrusch Karen Bennett Linda Salsburg Frank Stowell Brian Caldwell Glenda Parmer Cassie Spittner Jan Wiseman Ken Grays Greg Payne Jim Sweeney Doug Urban The Daily Texan, a stuoent newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications Drawer D. University Station. Austin, TX 78712-7209 The Daily Texan is published Monday. Tuesday Wednesday. Thursday and Friday except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austin TX 78710 News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Inquines concerning delivery and Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4 136) classified advertising should be made in TSP Building 3.200 (471 -5244) The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is Cass Communications. 1633 West Central Street. Evanston. Illinois 60201 CMPS. 1680 North Vine, Suite 900, Hollywood, CA 90028. American Passage 500 Third Avenue West. Seattle. WA 98119 The Daily Texan subscribes to United Press International and New York Times News Service The Texan is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press, the Southwest Journalism Congress, the Texas Daily Newspaper Association and American Newspaper Publishers Association, Columbia Scholastic Press Association Copyright 1983 Texas Student Publications The (M y Texan Subscription Ralee One Semester (Fall or Spnng) Two Semesters (Fall and Spnng) Summer Session One Year (Fall Spring and Summer) $24.00 4 9 00 15.60 60 00 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications. P 0 Box D Austin, TX 78712-7209. or lo TSP PUB NO 146440 Building C3 200 New 20" x 30' ' poster prints by Kodak! peg. 1 Made from 35 mm Kodacolor film negatives or transparencies. O n l y , * 1 595 co-op camera Through 3/31 /84 se con d level Kodak J MAJORING IN SERVICE SINCE 1896 The Daily Texan/Monday, March 19,1 84/Page 3 FIGHT BACK AGAINST COLD WEATHER HUNGRIES! COME BY ANY 1 OF OUR 10 AUSTIN AREA LOCATIONS AND ASK FOR A BOWL OF OUR DELICIOUS HOT SOUP, A SMALL SUB And a 16 oz. Drink, All for only 2 . 8 5 Beginning: MAR. 19, 1984 APR. 16, 1984 IN T E N SIV E EN G L ISH A N G L A IS IN T E N SIF ¿ ¿ S . IN G L É S IN T E N SIV O • NINE LEVEL COMPREHENSIVE COURSE • SMALL CLASSES, INDIVIDUAL ATTENTION • NEW LEVEL EVERY 4 WEEKS • AUTHORIZED UNDER FEDERAL LAW TO EN­ ROLL NON-IMMIGRANT ALIEN STUDENTS (I-20 FORM) DURHAM-NIX0N CLAY COLLEGE 8th & Colorado/2nd Floor 478-1602 CAPITOL SADDLERY EQUESTRIAN HEADQUARTERS FOR AUSTIN ENGLISH WESTERN Boot & Sh oe R e p air ★Handtooled Belts & Chaps* ★Handmade Boots* ♦Sterling Silver Belt Buckles* 1614 LAVACA 478-9309 A Whole New Radiance Is Yours! ESTEE LAUDER Shows You How... Casual Dressing For Those Who Dont Take Dressing Casually Here are simply the finest beauty treatments you can have. Estee Lauder's best. To protect and nourish your skin. Makeup essentials to polish your looks with glorious color. 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Your Free Estee Lauder Gift THE DEFINITE DIFFERENCE A 20 00 value Yours a t positively no extra c h a rg e with any Estee Lauder purchase of 7 50 or m ore Estee Lauder always makes the difference in your beauty life You see it right away In every super performer g ath ­ ered here Outstanding formulas, glorious colors and fra­ grance Their potential for creating really fresh, radiant good looks is unegualled And Estee Lauder makes it so easy to create it all yourself Swiss Performing Extract is the classic 24-hour nourishing lotion RE-NUTOIV Lipstick polishes lips with creamy color Luscious Creme Mascara makes longer, silkier lashes with coloi Maximum Care Body Lotion is smoothing luxury for all of your skin Youth Dew Eau de Parfum Spray mists on classic inviting fragrance One bonus per customer Offer expires Saturday, March 24 Éstee Laude Color Workshop, a t Yaring's UT, on Thursday, March 22 from 11:00am-2:00pm. $10.00 advance tickets are red ee m able tow ard your Estee Lauder purchase. Limited sessions, make your reservations early. . Whole Earth Provision Co. ^ 2410 San Antonio St. 4 7 6 - 1 5 7 7 6 6 6 6 Research 61 vd 4 5 6 * 6 3 6 3 Our International 5horte> and tops come from Patagonia, Royal R o b b in s- - And, from down under; Canterbury ¿ Silver Fern o f Mew Zealand. All the best, for th e casually dressed. Stop by soon. 1 llQQK? VO LOOK vwsm m r r mro M S # ,., Pi fti Page 4/The Daly Texan/Mondey, March 19,1964 EDITORIALS T h e d a il y Te x a n EcKtor Roger Campbel Editorial page edftors Tela Goodwin David Woodruff Editorial Assistants Andrea Blumberg Susan Daniels Laura Fisher Mary Jo Galindo Mark Horvtt Dan H. Jester Lee Kite Drew Parma Rick Rutledge Columnists Andrea Beebe Chris Boyd Julie Daniels Scott Durfee Lesli Hicks Martin Torres e Cartoonists Mark Antonuccio Brad Wines The GREAT ISSUES of m IU.I " L m , OK? / Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor or the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees. Editorial Researchers Lor Norvell Joe Rubio Students’ As Election turnout good sign F ew things are as essential to a successful will include several minorities elected March 7 and 8 — without the aid of a minority represen­ tation guarantee. government as constituent participation. That’s why government’s primary goal must be to get as many people involved as pos­ sible. Failing in that effort dooms any govern­ ment. With many students acting commendably on that principle, this year’s Students’ Association general election may be the turning point to de­ veloping a viable student government for the University. While not without its problems, i.e. ballot- counting, the two-day election was proof that it is possible to get more students involved in the campus electoral process. For example, it’s encouraging that the num­ ber of students running for positions in the Stu­ dents’ Association, as well as voting in the elec­ tion, increased significantly from recent years. What’s more, the 1984-85 Student Senate Perot proposals: Of course, one of the excuses still given for not voting in the student elections is claiming ignorance about the candidates. Those for whom that is the case should come hear presi­ dential candidates Rodney Schlosser and Scott Scarborough at noon Monday at a “ Meet the Press’’ debate in the Texas Union Building Board of Directors Room. A high voter turnout also is encouraged in Wednesday’s runoff election between Schlosser and Scarborough. The Texan Editorial Board stands behind its earlier endorsement of Rodney Schlosser for Students’ Assocciation president. Whatever the results of the election, your in­ creased participation pays dividends toward es­ tablishing a true student government. — Roger Campbell Too much ain’t enough A fter months of parading through the front sation. And without talented teachers, other efforts to improve education in Texas are doomed to failure. pages of Texas newspapers, the Select Committee on Public Education has re­ leased its proposals for reforming state public schools. Even more damning is the committee’s fail­ ure to come up with a plan that the state can afford. Unfortunately, a wish list — not even a com­ plete one, at that — is all the committee came up with. It’s not that the $2 billion-plus list of pro­ posed programs doesn’t include a lot of things the state education system needs. But the H. Ross Perot-led panel has failed to do two im­ portant things: come up with a complete teacher pay-raise plan and find a way for the state to afford the education reforms it has proposed. The teacher pay question led to the creation of the committee last summer; that should have been the first proposal to come out of its delib­ erations. The state cannot count on getting tal­ ented teachers without improving their compen­ A large package of increases in numerous state taxes and creation of a couple of new ones won’t pay for the proposed education reforms. And that arithmetic doesn’t include a teacher pay raise, which is likely to be one of the more expensive parts of any reform plan. Texas needs a better education system, and the proposals advanced so far will help a great deal. At the same time, committee members must realize the necessity of raising teachers’ salaries and of keeping costs within reason. Otherwise, the wish list isn’t too likely to come true. — David Woodruff FIRING UNE Fencing team ignored The crux of this letter is pride, spe­ cifically, pride of accomplishment. On the weekend of March 3-4, the UT Fencing Team competed in the Texas Collegiate Fencing Championships in San Marcos. We placed second over­ all, missing first place by two points. Eight of our fencers made it to the finals. And yet, when we submitted a list of the finalists to the Daily Texan sports department, they deemed it un­ newsworthy — not even worthy of the “ sportswire” column. Perhaps so. I will only mention in passing the briefs on the archery team, the drill team, the weight lifting team, the de­ bate that have appeared this year. Apparently they are newsworthy and we are not. But that’s not the entire point. team and others We represent this school. We are a very proud group. We all wear funny little orange and white armbands when we fence, and most of us wear a Longhorn on the sides of our masks. In two weeks, many of us will com­ pete in the Texas State Champion­ ships in Dallas. We will all have “ UT” next to our names. We have pride in spite of a university that doesn’t seem to care. Our program is not huge: we have no coach and we’re largely self- taught; we receive very little money from the school; we have a room in Bellmont Hall that is often taken away from us with little notice. But we still claim the University as our affiliation. W e’re not world-class fencers yet, but we still fence our tails off for the Uni­ versity and our own pride of accom­ plishment. Patrick Smith RTF Law stereotypes wrong I would like to congratulate Lisa Brown-Richau on her illuminating ar­ ticle (Images, March 5) describing the motivational factors that influence a student’s decision to pursue a legal ca­ reer. Her extensive use of gross general­ izations to completely distort reality was entertaining. I am glad she didn’t waste any of her valuable research time looking past stereotypical de­ scriptions of law, students before pi­ geonholing us all as confused former undergraduates who chose law school to become rich and make our parents happy. It is certainly true that monetary rewards are a motivating factor in the choice of a legal career. It is also a factor in the choice of any other pro­ fession. With a very limited exception for the truly altruistic few, most peo­ ple who claim that money isn’t a fac­ tor are either rich or lying. In a capi­ talistic society such as ours, the desire for a large income is given. It is not, however, the sole reason that every­ one attends law school. law regarding My classmates Even a cursory examination of the demographic composition of the law school population would reveal the fu­ tility of any attempt to make general­ izations students’ motivations. It is hard to imagine a more diverse group of individuals than that at the UT law school. include former CPAs, nurses, teachers, engineers, doctors, stockbrokers and even an Hawaiian oil field worker. I do not deny there are some law students who are enrolled to become rich and make their parents proud (some of my friends fit that category), but they are the exceptions. Three years of lost wages, mental stress, limited social life and the challenging workload would soon discourage those who are going to law school solely for the big bucks, or to delay entering the “ real world.” Yet 98 percent of the entering freshlaws eventually graduate. I don’t pretend that all law students are public-spirited, hardworking, for­ mer professionals who entered law school because they love the law, but the stereotypes portrayed by Brown- Richau are just as inaccurate. Andy Halpem Law Story snubs candidates One might possibly suggest — with good reason — that The Daily Texan is biased in its coverage of the District 14 state Senate race. In Dana Loy’s article (The Daily Texan, Feb. 28), “ Candidates Vie for Female Vote,” Loy seems to have forgotten that there are four candidates in the race. While co m in g a press confer­ ence organized by women supporting state Rep. Gonzalo Barrientos, Loy devoted a good portion of her article to Cathy Bonner, another candidate who is running on a feminist platform, and completely ignored the other can­ didates in the race. Why didn’t Loy mention Margaret Moore and Ed Small, who are also running for the state Senate? Even if these candidates aren’t attempting to appeal specifically to women, a brief mention that they were in the race would have been appropriate. For those of us who depend upon the Texan for fair and accurate report­ ing about the upcoming elections, it would be greatly appreciated if all of the candidates received equal cover­ age. There’s already a gender gap in Washington; let’s not have one in Austin, too. Michael Garcia Pre-business Off-campus lots needed I have an excellent solution to UT’s problem with overcrowded parking lots and limited shuttle bus availabili­ ty. Off-campus “ C ” parking lots should be built and shuttle bus routes should be created for them. Students that currently live off campus and ride the shuttle are forced to pay a little more for the added convenience of being on a bus route. If only two park­ ing lots were built, one near Highway 183 and another near Ben White Boul­ evard, then the shuttle buses would be accessible to many more UT students than now. Furthermore this would ease the crowded conditions in the campus “ C ” lots and give students more freedom to live anywhere in Austin. Don Fogle Business Rule biased against men I am appalled by the discrimination at this university. Is there no justice? Have we no constitutional rights in Ais bastion of learning that is funded by our great state? Well, I think so. O f course, I am speaking about the Student Escort Service (a.k.a. the rape van). Recently, after leaving the library at night, I chose to protect myself. Instead of risking the chance of being violated, I thought that I Prayer amendment necessary to undo 20 years of injustice Chris Boyd Daily Texan Columnist A constitutional amendment to allow voluntary prayer in schools will undo a wrong made more than 20 years ago. In 1963, a lawsuit brought by athe­ ist Madalyn Murray O ’Hair resulted the Supreme in d eclarin g C ourt school prayer and Bible reading un­ c o n s t i t u t i o n a l . Now, the Senate has the opportunity to the approve amendment and begin reversing a se­ rious injustice. supposedly suffered O ’Hair’s main incentive in the case to have prayer banned stemmed from the violence her son, a public school student, from classmates because he refused to pray. But times have changed since 1963. If voluntary prayer were brought back in the more open-minded atmosphere of the ’80s, the ridicule a non-praying student would face would be. at best, minor. Forgetting to wear the school colors on the day the football team plays would be a worse offense. Some argue that children can still pray in school, but they must do it in private. As one amendment supporter put it, “ So can children in the Soviet Union.’’ This amendment would get rid of the 1963 ruling’s anti-God stig­ ma, allowing children of all religions to pray the way they wish. Amendment opponents overlook the inescapable reality that children of different religious beliefs will have to confront each others' views some time in their life. What more appropriate place to begin that process than at school? There also is the argument of sepa­ ration of church and state as implied in the Constitution. However, that ar­ gument has been seriously damaged by a recent Supreme Court ruling al­ lowing communities to display nativi­ ty scenes to celebrate the Christmas holidays. In the majority opinion, Chief Jus­ tice Warren Burger said the Constitu­ tion erects a “ blurred, indistinct and variable barrier” between church and state. The 5-4 ruling also declared that the Constitution does not “ require complete separation of church and state" but calls for “ accommodation, not merely tolerance of all religions and forbids hostility toward an y ." constitutional amendment would enhance that spirit of religious accommodation in the United States Under the Reagan plan, the form school prayer takes cannot be dictated by state or local authorities or teach­ ers. This would get rid of practices such as reading a prepared prayer over the school intercom system. This Then, there is the argument that this amendment would violate the First Amendment. Here is how it is stated: “ Congress shall make no law respect­ ing an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. For 20 years, the second part of that phrase has been violated. But, what about atheists' rights? Again, they can't be forced to pray, so their rights are protected. If O ’Hair and other atheists don't want their children to be “ contaminated” by ex­ posure to prayer, they can buy them earmuffs, or enroll them in an atheist school. Other religious beliefs have been shut out of the classroom too long. Sen Lowell Weicker, R-Conn., that church-state separation argues was established to prevent religious tyranny. But he goes too far in voicing his opposition the amendment. to “ We will not have an Inquisition. We will not have English Protestants mur­ dering Irish and English Catholics." he said. These typical nonsequitur scare tactics only highlight the correct intentions of the amendment. Of course, warnings that amend­ ment opponents will "bum in H ell" are equally ridiculous and only cloud the real issue that this constitutional amendment will correct: the rights of anyone who wants to pray should not be denied by any court or legislature By approving this amendment, the Congress and the states would make God, Allah or whichever religious fig­ ure a welcomed part of the education­ al process once again, rather than an unwelcomed guest no one wants to talk about.________________________ Boyd is a journalism history senior. would ride to safety courtesy of the Escort Service van. Why was I concerned about my body, you ask? Well, being a full- fledged male heterosexual and per­ turbed about the recent uprising and boldness of the University’s gay com­ munity, I feared being spiked in the endzone — against my will. Anyway, in boarding the van, I noticed that there were only girls inside the vehi­ cle. Puzzled, I spoke out in a robust, manly voice, “ Hey ... broads.” Apparently not noticing me until I spoke, the driver then queried, “ What are you doing on this van, you’re not a girl? Men are not allowed on this van.” Thankful the driver noticed, but shocked because the driver was also a male, I felt the unfairness that all mi­ norities have experienced in the past. The driver grudgingly took me to my destination, but upon arrival, he chastised me and told me never to ride the rape van again. I cannot stand by and let this vile act of discrimination go undaunted. I charge the University to change this part of the Student Services Fee to in­ clude men. We won’t stand by and let our bodies and our rights be violated any longer. Richard Apel Business Film distorts situation Upon viewing “ Nicaragua: Report from the Front” last Sunday evening, it became obvious that the proponents of this leftist attitude cannot seem to see the forest for the trees, if you will. The over-zealous nature of the film is so busy ridiculing the Reagan ad­ ministration and its policies, that what logical minds would consider to be their primary goal, namely the better­ ment of humanitarian conditions in Central America, is given only sec­ ondary importance. I understand the severity of the cir­ cumstances in Nicaragua right now and I would be the last to condone the killings and massacres that have oc­ curred there, but this is not my point. My point is that if one views the film from a totally objective perspective, he sees that virtually all of the blame for the strife gripping the region now is laid on the United States. ,? W \ •* V*- 4 * - V .v is The passion of these activists (1 in no way intend the term to be derogato­ ry) so overwhelmingly dominates their reason that their view of the cur­ rent situation terribly distorted. Moreover, although I am not here to argue a case for patriotism, my logic simply cannot accept the idea that the United States and its foreign policy is so fully responsible for Nicaraguan troubles as the leftist backing of the film would have me believe. One cannot deny U.S. support of the rebel forces in Nicaragua and Honduras, but our support does not reach the absurd extent that this film would like us to believe. This statement is not a judgment of our policies in Central America — they have far too long a history and contain far too many variables to dis­ cuss in such a limited space — but this is an outcry against the makers and supporters of this film. Your goals, which you obviously believe in strongly, would be more quickly reached and more widely ac­ cepted from a somewhat more objec­ tive standpoint. Kevin Ramsey Economics/Latin American Studies Relativism unjustifiable In his attack on Rick Rutledge’s re­ cent editorial on relativism, Paul K. Smith (The Daily Texan, March 7) was quite mistaken in his two conclu­ sions. is relative, Smith totally failed in his attempt to justify relativism. The isssue is clear: if everything then no man’s brand of morality is better than another’s. And if this is so, then I dare not condemn the murderer; I dare not condemn the rapist; I dare not con­ demn the man who sets a little boy on fire. There is no real crime, only the breaking of an arbitrary man-made law. Of course, if by “ relativism” Smith means every man’s freedom to make his own moral choices, he is certainly right. But I’m afraid this misses the whole point of Rutledge’s article. Smith went on to impute totalitarian motives to Rutledge’s view, naively confusing relativism with democracy. While it is true that there are many who would use absolutism to gain po­ litical power, whether from a religious base or a humanistic one, nonetheless, it is the relativist who leads us to total­ itarianism. Because, if there are no absolutes, then democracy is no long­ er an absolute. In future years, when we get over our current emotional eu­ phoria over human rights, then noth­ ing will be left, except a dead, self- gratifying culture that will only value certain special people. Unthinkable? It is beginning today with the murder of the handicapped child in the womb. Wayne Joubert Mathematics Writing exposes itself Unfortunately, bad writing often exposes insensitivity. Perhaps the next chatty anecdote on terminal diseases Brown tackles for Images, (March 5), will be in her league. Or maybe Rus­ sell Scott should have written it; he seemed to handle the same style well enough in discussing haircuts. Melanie Doan Latin American Studies Texan coverage good The “ Firing Line” of The Daily Texan is becoming a simple gripe sec­ tion. You can always count on stu­ dents griping about the Texan staffs unprofessional slanting of issues and news events. Some students even gripe over the headline given to their f “ Firing Line” letters, others com­ plain about the paper’s failure to cover particular events, while others gripe about the gripers. I am not bothered by the Texan’s writings. There are always several points of view to a given issue. Slant­ ing an issue, for or against my person­ al point of view, serves to strengthen my beliefs by either reaffirming my position or by allowing me to hear the other side of the argument and then mentally refute the opposition’s posi­ tion. If your own beliefs are not strong enough to stand up to someone else’s opinion, they may need reviewing. If you ate simply too childish to hear another’s opinion and respect it, grow up. Michael Russ Mechanical engineering The EMy Ttxan/Mondfly, March 19,1964/Page 5 Bring business, liberal arts together VIEWPOINTS From our readers Paul Nelson and Robert C. Solomon A t H arvard U n iv e rsity , the is separated business school from the rest o f the university by the C harles R iver. T he sym bolism is un m istak ab le, and it is e xpressed with som e vengeance on both sides. rath er than w isd o m , At the U niversity o f T e x a s, through accident the B usiness A d m in istratio n -E co n o m ics B uilding is less than 30 feet o r so from W aggener H all, w hich houses som e o f the liberal arts departm ents. And yet. for the am ount o f com m erce and m utual und erstan d in g betw een them , they m ight as w ell be at o p p o ­ site ends o f the state. the expense o f the T his is a tragedy N atio n w id e, the num ber o f students m ajoring in b u si­ ness has increased e n o rm o u sly , often liberal arts. at liberal arts d ep artm en ts have Som e sim ply pretended that nothing has happened. O th e rs, to h o l d up their e n ­ r o l lm e n t s . have yielded to the tem p ta ­ tion to b ecom e s e n ice organs o f the b u s i n e s s sc h o o l. T h i s has not fostered understanding but resen tm en t. the The effect of this has been negative it en d an g e rs the in teg ri­ on both sid es ty of liberal arts d ep artm en ts, which find them selves p rostituted to concerns quite d ifferre n t from their o w n . and it tu rn s the b u s i n e s s school, as w ell as the u n iv ersity , into a |ob shop the very antith esis of a um- versitv indeed, there has been O ur point in this colum n is not to dem ean the business school or its stu­ dents. too m uch of that a lre a d y . and m ost o f it undeserved N or is it once again to attem pt a d efen siv e plea for the su ­ prem acy o f the liberal arts, such pleas, m fact, tend to be c o u n te r-p ro d u ctiv e and underscore the problem O ur joint c oncern one of us is a professor o f business, the other a pro­ fessor of philosophy — is the need for respect and mutual autonomy between disciplines and the right o f every stu­ dent to be able, but not forced, to take advantage of the University as a whole. The present compartmentaliza- tion, which exists as much in the minds o f the students as in the struc­ ture of the University, denies this need and discourages the exercise of this right. Career success and the sen­ sibilities provided by a liberal arts ed­ ucation are both goals o f the Universi­ ty, and any pressure to choose between them is a perversion o f the very idea of the University and “ high­ er" education. from discouraged In earlier years, it may well have been the case that students were too readily taking “ practical" courses; thus the low visi­ bility and often the abysmal quality of business schools, until only a few years ago. Now, the pressures have reversed, and too many students who would be better served in their careers as well as in their university education by a liberal arts or other “ impracti­ c a l" major feel compelled to a major in business. T his would not be a prob­ lem — it there were more communi­ cation and cooperation between the required schools. An course — logic for accounting majors — does not solve the problem. occasional in the Tex) m any students liberal arts graduate w ith the regret that they h a v e n 't had even a g lim pse o f practi­ cal preparation. T oo m any students w ho believe they are “ fo rc e d " into business believe that they have w asted their years at the U n iv ersity . T hey find out that they could have gotten the sam e jo b and also satisfied their interests in liberal arts subjects. Som e do badly in business school, and so deprive them selves do u b ly . Students w ho aspire to go on for a m aster o f business adm in istratio n find out too late that they w ould have had a better chance at the best graduate schools w ith a m ajor o th er than busin ess. At H arvard, m ore than 80 percent o f the first year M B A students are n o n -b u si­ ness majors; at Texas, 50 to 60 per­ cent are non-business majors. The point is not that students ought to major in the liberal arts, but neither ought they, in general, major in busi­ ness. What is needed, and should be encouraged, is a wider sense o f the options and opportunities offered by the University. There always will be liberal arts majors who wouldn’t be caught dead in BEB, and there will In earlier years, it may well have been the case that stu­ dents were too readily dis­ couraged from taking “ prac­ tical” courses; thus the low visibility and often the abys­ mal quality o f business schools, until only a few years ago. Now, the pres­ sures have reversed, and too many students would be bet­ ter served in their careers as well as in their University ed­ ucation by a liberal arts or other “ impractical” major feel compelled to major in business. This would not be a problem — i f there were more communication and co­ o p era tio n th e schools. betw een continue to be many business students who are so absorbed in their business studies that they do not want to dis­ tract themselves. The tragedy, however, are those many business students who do not even know about, or are too intimidat­ ed to even audit, any of the excellent courses across Inner Campus Drive, a problem compounded by those in the liberal arts who try so hard to pretend that business doesn’t even exist in the University. And those many liberal arts students who fret away much of their undergraduate time wondering what in the world they might do once they get “ ou t.” What is to be done? First, it is in­ cumbent on both the liberal arts col­ lege and the business school to get to know one another and to encourage their students to do so as well. It means that such crucial concerns as “ I’d better major in business if I want to get a job” and “ what can I do with a degree in ------------- ” deserve honest answers. It means that the liberal arts departments must make an effort to make their courses known in the busi­ ness school, but without “ selling out” or taking the easy route by way o f required courses, which eventually have the deadly effect o f enslaving one department and cheating another. It means that the business school should encourage its students with electives to look beyond the business school to fill them, and it should con­ sider the motives and interests o f its majors as well as their grades and glibly stated ambitions. And finally, much o f the task falls onto business itself: employers can encourage well- rounded students by expanding their own searches, recruiting campus-wide instead o f just in the business school and have the foresight to hire students who can quickly learn the business as well as those who have had a textbook introduction in it. Inevitably, some o f what we have said will be interpreted as hostile to our friends in the business school, and the same points will be interpreted by our friends in the liberal arts as being much too “ pro-business.” But the point o f our joint letter is precisely to try to get beyond such false antago­ nisms, so that every student has the oportunity to take full advantage of his or her four years at the University. Nelson is a senior lecturer in mar­ keting. Solomon is a professor o f phi­ losophy. Career choices easier with help of computers From our readers K. Richard Pyle Some o f you are no doubt say­ ing, possibly with good cause, “ Computers, com ­ puters, everywhere and now they into! Is are going to tell me what career to go it conceivable that George Orwell’s 1984 fantasy is really true and Big Brother (the computer) is really a threat to my decision making?” W ell, it’s true computers are they w ill, no everywhere and doubt, be in even greater abun­ dance in the years ahead. From history we know that 200 years passed from the time the book was introduced until teachers began us­ ing them. We already know that computers will not endure such a fate. Among predictions for com ­ puters in higher education, as re­ ported by the Chronicle o f Higher Education, are these: • There will be 20 times more microcomputers in use in Ameri­ can companies in 1985 as there were in 1980. • Within 20 years, computers will replace the book as the major delivery device in bringing educa­ tion to students. Therefore, it should not be sur­ prising that a software program has been conceived that is designed to help students with career decision­ making. information about Good decision-making not only requires the world o f work but also information about self. How do my unique in­ terests, skills and values fit the world o f work? Such an under­ standing, it is assumed, can help the individual find a work setting where the probability o f success and happiness will be enhanced. For several years computers have been used to gain information on the world o f work. Only recent­ ly, systems that help individuals gain information on the self have been perfected. We at the Univer­ sity are fortunate to have such a system. It is called DISCOVER and has been developed by the American College Testing Service. DISCOVER, is designed to do four things: 1) G ive you an opportunity to interests, skills and assess your values. 2) Provide you with occupa­ tions that fit your interests, skills and values. 3) A llow you to ask numerous questions on occupations. These range from employment outlook to definitions and nature o f work. 4) Give you an opportunity to look at what types o f degree and academic skills are necessary to enter an occupation and provide you with a list o f educational insti­ tutions (both undergraduate and graduate) which can assist in a ca­ reer goal. The major advantage to the com ­ puter in the career decision-making process is that within a relatively short time (two to three hours) you can gain a large amount o f relevant information about yourself and the world o f work. The major disadvantage to the computer program is that it is not designed to help the student syn­ thesize the information, to correct misconceptions and to develop an action plan. These critical elements are the counselor’s role. As a con­ sequence, the Career Center as­ sures every student going through DISCOVER a counselor to manage the process and to aid in the full use o f the information. Research has clearly pointed out that the computer alone does not have the impact and value as does the coun­ selor and computer. If you are interested in being in­ volved in a program that uses the computer to assist in your decision making please call the Career Cen­ ter at 471-1217 or stop by 115A Jester Center for information. P yle is coordinator o f counseling at the Career Center. We’re Burried In BOOKS YOU DECIDE Students' Association PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FO RUM 12 N O O N -1:30 pm TODAY Rodney SCHLOSSER VS Scott SCARBOROUGH Texas Union Board of Directors Room Texas Union 4.118 jointly sponsored by the Texas Union Ideas and Interaction Committee and the Students' Association Student Association Elections Books of every kind! Photography, romance, westerns, novels, art, foreign language, fiction, non-fiction, mysteries & more. Paperbacks 25{: Hardbacks *2-*5 Come dig us out and save yourself a landslide in TEXTBOOKS lower level MAJORING IN SERVICE SINCE 1896 PpgR flm » D§Éf TRxan/Monday, Munch 19,1964 WORLD &. NATION NEWS IN BRIEF Salvador elections called absurd by rebel leader From Texan news services SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — A Salvadoran rebel commander Sun­ day called next w eek’s U.S.-backed elections a “ jok e” and announced a new guerrilla offensive to disrupt the voting. Salvadoran rebel commander Joaquin Villalobos, head o f the Peo­ ple’s Guerrilla Army, said, “ We are going to expand the war before, dur­ ing and after the elections” scheduled for next Sunday. He called the new offensive “ N o to the Electoral Farce, Yes to the People’s W ar.” Priest decries Polish ban W ARSAW , Poland — A pro-Soli- darity priest, Jerzy Popielsko, used a sermon Sunday to denounce the Com­ munist regim e’s ban on crucifixes in classrooms. The crucifix ban was in­ troduced at a school in the town of Mietne outside the capital 13 days ago. The ban touched off angry stu­ dent protests that led to the school’s indefinite closure and a deepening confrontation between the church and the Communist state. Marcos blasts aid cut M ANILA, Philippine Islands — President Ferdinand Marcos Sunday denounced meetings between U .S. congressmen and Filipino opposition leaders seeking American support be­ fore key parliamentary elections. “ It is not for the Americans to decide who is going to be the president o f the Philippines,” Marcos told 80,000 cheering supporters. “ It is not for the Americans to decide who should go to the Batasan Pambansa (National A s­ sem bly).” Hansen ethics trial starts WASHINGTON — Rep. George Hansen, R-Idaho, faces trial Monday to disclose on charges o f failing $333,978 transactions. in financial The maverick seven-term congress­ man, who said he is not nervous about the trial, is the first public official to be tried for violating the Ethics in Government Act. If convicted, he could get a maximum five years in prison and $10,000 fine for each count. Smoking ban talks set WASHINGTON — The Civil Aer­ onautics Board meets Monday to de­ cide whether to ban cigarette smoking on airplanes during short domestic flights. The independent government agency is expected to instruct its staff to draft a final smoking rule, a CAB spokesman said. The CAB voted ten­ tatively last year to prohibit smoking on flights lasting either one hour or less or two hours or less. A smoking prohibition is opposed by the tobacco industry and the nation’s airlines. Regan arrives in Peking PEKING — Treasury Secretary Donald Regan arrived in Peking Sun­ day to sign a Sino-American tax treaty and lay out the economic agenda for President Reagan’s April trip to Chi­ na. Regan will lead the American side in the fourth annual session o f the U .S.-China Joint Economic Commit­ tee, a task he called “ a vital step in an historic undertaking.” He also is scheduled to meet Premier Zhao Zi- yang. GM X-car recall sought WASHINGTON — The govern­ ment’s top attorney in a suit seeking the recall o f 1.1 million General Mo­ tors 1980 X-cars says he will show in federal court that the vehicles have a pattern o f brake failures. Justice De­ partment lawyer Lawrence Moloney said the government plans to call more disgruntled X-car owners to testify in U .S. District Court Monday to back up its case that the cars are unsafe and should be fixed. Woman denied parole GIG HARBOR, Wash. — Wash­ ington Gov. John Spellman made a rare intervention in the criminal jus­ tice system last week when he ordered a woman convicted o f killing three children in a drunken driving accident not be paroled. Dorothy Judge had her bags packed after serving two years o f a maximum 10-year sentence when the governor made the order. Her at­ torney asked the state Supreme Court last week to stop the governor from delaying her parole. A hearing on that has been set for April 19. Blizzard bops Denver DENVER — A near blizzard touted as one of the “ outstanding storms o f the year” whistled into Colorado Sun­ day, carrying heavy snow, rain and heavy winds. Sub-zero cold frosted Minnesota, and snow-covered Chica­ go waited for spring. The National Weather Service said up to IS inches o f snow could fall on Denver before the storm passes through Monday morning. Iranians claim Iraq employing chemical bombs United Press International Iran Sunday accused Iraq o f using nerve gas and germ warfare on the southern battlefront, injuring hun­ dreds o f Iranians in its latest chemical weapons attack in the 42-m onth-old the Persian G ulf war. charge. Iraq denied in attacks Iraq reported Sunday that it used helicopter gunships that killed 119 Iranian troops east of the southern Iraqi port city Basra. It said Iranian shelling o f Basra killed a civil­ ian and demolished a house. Iran’s official news agency IRNA injured by said 460 soldiers were “ microbic and nerve bom bs” Satur­ day and more than 200 “ are suffering from nervous spasm due to being ex ­ posed to nerve b o m b s.” The Iranian claim o f the chemical attack on the K heibar front, 40 to 70 miles north o f Basra, was at least the third alleged Iraqi chem ical attack since the current offensive began on Feb. 22. Iraq responded to the latest Iranian accusation by saying it was prepared to take journalists to see a fertilizer factory in a remote section o f western Iraq, which western repons have iden­ tified as the source o f Iraq's chemical weapons. “ Zionist and Iranian organs, which are working in full collaboration, have not ceased to fabricate such allega­ tions about the nature of this p la n t.” senior governm ent officials in the Ira­ qi capital o f Baghdad said. The officials said Iran was looking for an excuse to attack the factory and “ other Iraqi econom ic targets ” The Iranian charge Sunday cam e a day after an Iraqi general told jou rn al­ ists on that Baghdad would not rule out the use of chemical weapons against Iran. the warfront “ If they keep coming and attacking us we shall not hesitate to use any weapons, even chemical w eap on s.” said Gen. Maher Abd al-Rasheed. com m ander o f the 3rd Army Corps IRNA, the official Iranian news agency monitored in London, said a U .N. fact-finding team that arrived in Iran last week to investigate charges of Iraqi use of chemical weapons re­ turned to the southern battlefront Sun­ day after a short stay in Tehran IRNA said the U N team went to the southern Iranian port ot Ahvaz “ to inspect the effects of yesterday’s Iraqi chemical and bacteriological bom b­ ing” and interview s o l d i e r s injured by chemical attacks More than 2,200 soldiers had been injured by chemical attacks over the past m onth, IRNA said, adding Iraq had launched more than 50 chemical attacks in the 3 ‘/ 2-year war. Ferocious reaction United Press International The father o f a man convicted in the New Bedford, duct when he swung his cane at a cameraman during a M ass., barroom rape trial is arrested outside the court- disturbance after two o f the six men accused in the case house. Joseph Viera Sr. was arrested for disorderly con- were convicted Saturday. Mideast United Press International BEIRUT, Lebanon — Christian and Moslem militias battled with mor­ tar and machine gun fire in Beirut and south o f the capital Sunday in re­ newed violence that highlighted the lack of progress of peace talks in Switzerland. A shell exploded over the U .S. Em­ bassy in west Beirut, but there were the Marines no casualties among guarding the compound that houses the mission. Marine Capt. Keith Oliver said. But Beirut hospitals reported one dead and five wounded in fighting across the green line dividing C hris­ tian east Beirut from mostly M oslem peace talks stall; violence grows west Beirut, a day after 15 were killed in increasing violence despite a cease­ fire declared M onday. Nine Lebanese faction leaders, en­ tering their second week of peace talks in Lausanne, Sw itzerland, met for two hours Sunday m orning and ad­ journed a full night session after only 15 minutes without apparent progress. “ The fighting continues because there is no political will to arrive at a com prom ise,” Druse M oslem leader W alid Jum blatt said. ‘‘And there is no political will because the lighting con­ tinues.” Conference sources said President Amin Gemayel proposed the same re­ forms he offered weeks before the conference, and they were again re­ jected. Discussion during one full ses­ sion had included such minor items as the creation o f tw o vice prime m inis­ ters. M oslem Druse-operated Voice of the M ountain Radio and right-wing Voice of Lebanon radio both reported mortar and m achine gun exchanges over the green line, and fighting be­ tween Christian and Moslem fighters in the Iklim Karroub coastal region, about 30 miles south. U .S. officials aided b> M oslem militiamen and the Lebanese govern­ ment continued their search for A m er­ ican diplom at W illiam B uckles, kid­ napped outside his home by gunmen Friday. Sheikh M oham med Mehdi Sham- seddin. spiritual leader for L ebanon’s more than 1 million Shiites, accused Israel o f trying to force Lebanese out of the southern part o f the co untry. which it has occupied since June 1982. “ We tell the United States that Isra­ el is using Am erican weapons against us, and it is reinforcing its strength through American financial, military S ham seddin and political charged, according the state-run Lebanese national news agency a id ,” to “ If Israel begins to implement its plan, we will not limit our confronta­ tion to Israel alo n e,” he said “ We will face America also since we con­ sider it responsible for all the aggres­ lsra- sions carried out against u s by e l.” In Tel A viv, Israel, a military spokesman said a mem ber of an Israe­ li military patrol was wounded Sun day by a roadside explosion near the Israeli-occupied port ot Sidon. a mili tary spokesman s a i d Israel’s Armed Forces Radio quoted defense sources as s a y i n g that Israel will await the outcom e ot the peace l.ausanne before deciding talks whether to pull back its army to new l i n e s in south Lebanon in Egypt comes to Sudan defense after Libyan attack on capital United Press International CAIRO, Egypt — Egypt and Sudan invoked a joint defense pact Sunday and said their forces had teamed up to defend strategic positions inside Su­ dan in the wake of a Libyan aerial bombardment o f Khartoum. In Tripoli, the Libyan government o f Col. Moammar Khadafy denied it was behind Friday’s bombing of a Khartoum suburb and said the inci­ dent was part o f a U.S.-backed con­ spiracy against Libya. A bomber, identified by Egypt and Sudan as a Soviet-made TU-22 based in Libya, dropped five bombs on the Omdurman section o f the Sudanese capital, reportedly killing five people and sharply escalating tension with Libya. The Sudanese governm ent said it was requesting an em ergency m eeting of the U .N . Security C ouncil to con­ sider the Libyan ‘‘aggression” and that it had lodged a com plaint against Libya with the Tunis-based Arab League. Sudanese President Jaafar Nu- m eiry, in a speech to army officers in Khartoum late Saturday, said Egypt and Sudan had put into effect a mutual defense pact signed in 1976 after a Libyan attem pt to overthrow him. In C airo, Egyptian Foreign M inister Kamal Hassan Ali also said the pact was in force and Egypt was taking ‘‘military m easures to repel any ag­ gression against Sudan in cooperation with the Sudanese arm ed fo rces.” A highly placed governm ent source said the United States was considering airlifting defensive military equipm ent to Sudan. In W ashington, the State Department had no com m ent. U.S. A m bassador in Cairo Nicholas Veliotes met Sunday with President Hosni M ubarak, Defense M inister Field M arshal Abdel Halim Abu-Gha- zala, and Foreign M inister Ali. Those talks covered ‘‘all issues that are of current interdst to our two coun­ tries, including bilateral relations as well as regional issu es,” Veliotes said. Neither Sudan nor Egypt provided details on the joint military measures or said how m any, if any, Egyptian troops have moved into the neighbor­ ing nation to the south. Jury selection continues in Lucas trial United Press International SAN ANGELO — Lawyers try again Monday to select seven more jurors to hear the capital murder trial of Henry Lee Lucas, with no indica­ tion how long it will take. “ When we get to the ninth or tenth juror it’s going to be pretty selec­ tive,” defense attorney Max Parker said o f the selection process that in­ cludes naming two alternates to the 12-member jury. “ We could be done with jury selec- tion by Wednesday or it could take another two w eek s,” Parker said. “ It’s hard to tell when both sides still have 11 strikes each .” slayings across Lucas, who has admitted more than 150 the country, received a change o f venue to stand trial for strangling an unidentified woman hitchhiker near Georgetown. The woman’s body, clad only in orange socks, was found along a high­ way on Halloween night 1979. Lucas was indicted by a Williamson County grand jury o f killing, sexually assault­ ing, robbing and kidnapping the wom­ an. Attorneys last week selected seven women jurors, narrowing a list o f po­ tential jurors from 300 to about 100. Individual questioning of potential jurors is to resume at 1 p.m. Monday. The prosecution and defense each have 15 peremptory challenges, in ad­ dition to the people the judge excuses for cause. Each side has excused four people so far. No, these people aren’t lining up to get into the newest new wave club, they’re showing off the latest ready-to-wear fashions by two London design­ ers. Stevie Stewart and David Holah are try ing to put London back in the fashion mainstream with their creations, which were shown Saturday. Police warned before Louisiana shooting United Press International BATON ROUGE, La. — Ten min utes before Gary Plauche shot his son’s alleged kidnapper, a friend called detectives to warn that Plauche “ was going to try to hurt a prisoner they were supposed to be bringing in .” The friend told police Plauche had called him twice Friday night from an airport pay phone and that he heard the fatal shot fired during the second call. Between the conversations with Plauche, the friend, whose name was not released, had called the East Ba­ ton Rouge Parish sh eriffs office. He asked to speak to Maj. Mike Barnett to warn him about Plauche’s plan. Sgt. Ricky Murphy, not realizing Barnett was on the plane bringing kid­ napping suspect Jeffery Paul Doucet back to Louisiana from California, said he tried to find Barnett. By the time he returned the call, Plauche had shot and fatally wounded Doucet. “ When I called him back, he said he was just talking to him (Plauche) on the phone and he heard a shot,” Murphy said. “ He was actually talk­ ing to him when that (shooting) hap­ pened.” Plauche, 38, disguised in a baseball cap and dark glasses, shot Doucet in the head Friday night as he was being led by deputies through Metro Airport after being extradited from California to stand trial for the kidnapping o f Jody Plauche, 12. Doucet, 25, the youngster’s karate instructor, died Saturday and Plauche has been booked on a second-degree murder charge. The friend, who apparently did not know Plauche was at the airport, warned detectives a “ friend had called him and said he was going to try to hurt a prisoner they were sup­ posed to be bringing in ,” Murphy said. Attorney Foster Sanders said Satur­ day that Plauche was “ consum ed” by the thought that his son had been physically and mentally abused during the Feb. 19 kidnapping. The boy was rescued, apparently unharmed, and Doucet arrested in a motel room in Anaheim, C alif., on Feb. 28. “ (Plauche) was happy to see his son alive but distressed and depressed by serious and perm anent dam age he believed his son may have experi­ enced,” Sanders said. manded ransom from Jo d y ’s parents but in phone calls to the b oy’s mother asked her to “ take her other three children and join him in New York if she wanted to see her son again.” Sanders said Plauche was sedated, yet still extremely distraught, when they visited Saturday at the East Baton Rouge Parish jail. Plauche will appear before a judge Monday to try to gain his release by posting a property bond, Sanders said. In an interview last July with the * Baton Rouge State-Tim es, Jody said Doucet was the “ best friend” o f ev- * eryone on the karate team that toured the nation. Plauche’s wife credited Doucet with helping her son mentally and physically. to Witnesses the killing said Plauche appeared to be calm and me­ thodical and seemed relieved after the shooting. Officials said Doucet never de- “ You wouldn’t believe what this has done for my children, especially the youngest, who is a slow learner,” she said in the interview. “ I wish more people who have children with learning disabilities would do this.” / Perot commission unveils school plan By ANNE MASCHKA Daily Texan Staff The state S elect C om m ittee on Pub­ lic Education unveiled its final pro­ posals to the public last w eek , recom ­ m ending the State Board o f Education be replaced by an appointed com m is­ sion and that the size o f classes in e le ­ mentary sch ools be reduced. The com m ittee also recom m ended that less m oney be spent on vocational and distributive education courses. Better know n as the Perot C om m it­ tee, after m illionaire chairman H. R oss Perot, members have labored for nearly a year after G ov. Mark White charged them with the duty o f recom ­ m ending educational reforms. W hite has discussed a possible spe­ cial legislative session this summer if the recom m endations m eet with favor. com m ittee’s Starting at the top o f the education­ al pyram id, the com m ittee affirmed Perot’s suggestion o f dism antling the elected State Board o f Education and replacing it with a seven-m em ber com m ission appointed by the gover­ nor. the increasing E n h an cin g low er grad es em ­ erged as a p rio rity , w ith the option o f c h ild ren startin g school at age 4 , kin­ d erg arten to a full day, m inim um m andatory age for attending school d ro p p in g from 7 to 5, and the in a classroom n u m b er o f students dro p p in g the fourth grade. through to 15 T he sm a lle r class size w ould cost a p p ro x im ately $1.1 billion alone, e a t­ ing u p all the m oney from a proposed penny increase in the state sales tax. S o the high schools w ould get recom ­ squ eezed . T he m ended m oney be m oved from voca­ tional and distributive e ducatio n p ro­ gram s to the elem entary grades. com m ittee E x tra cu rric u la r activities m ay su f­ fer, if P e ro t’s ideas are im plem ented “ T he q u estio n is. w ill w e cut fat in the hjj i sch ools to put m uscle in the elementary program?” Perot said. Decisions reached by the com m ittee last W e e k included other reforms in­ cluding: • A seven-hour academ ic block, including lunch and rest periods for younger students, w hich could not be interrupted by extracurricular activi­ ties. • Extracurricular activities, special courses and " life enrichm ent” pro­ grams w ould be held for tw o hours after the seven-hour academ ic day. • M oving the University Interscho­ lastic League from the University o f Texas to the State Board o f Educa­ tion. • Required tutorials for elem entary students failing courses, and optional tutorials for older students. Tutoring w ould take place after the seven-hour day as w ell. • Mandatory learning programs in state day-care centers, which would rate. the • A dding 10 days to the present 175-day school year. • C om petency testing for current teachers in addition to present co m ­ petency tests for students entering e d ­ ucation on the college level. The c o m ­ mittee estim ated such testing would rid public schools o f 2 0 ,0 0 0 incom ­ petent instructors. • A p e rfo rm a n ce -b ased c a re er lad­ d e r fo r teachers. • A req u irem en t that state colleges o f e d u ca tio n m anage a local school in co o p era tio n w ith local school d is­ tricts. • A 37 p ercent pay increase fo r b e ­ g inning tea ch e rs, boosting the m o n th ­ ly salary to $ 1 ,5 2 0 . Such a plan w ould cost the state a p ­ prox im ately $ 2 .6 billion. S tate C o m p ­ troller B ob B ullock and state R ep. Stan S c h lu ete r, D -K illeen . p redicted the c o m m itte e ’s proposal w ill not su r­ vive because o f the big p rice tag. THIS WEEK so (2 4 Regul* ^ 00 The DaNy Texan/Monday, March 19,1984/Page 7 Hospital expansion heads for East Austin By RICHARD DYER Daily Texan S taff T he B rackenridge H ospital board is e x p ected to send E ast A ustin land ac­ q u isitio n p ro p o sals to the C ity C ouncil in the near future. H ospital a d m in istrato r B ob S purck said the land — part o f a 2 0 -y e ar h o s­ pital ex p an sio n plan — p roposed for the E ast A ustin acquisition only has p arking lots and one office building on it. “ A s you can see, w e ’re not talk in g about g oing too far into East A u s tin ,” he said S unday. But the p ro p e rty , w hich will extend from 1H 35 to W aller Street betw een E ast 13th and 14th streets, d o e sn ’t co n tain office buildings o r parking lots; it c o n ta in s 12 private residences. P .A R ay, w hose 908 E. 13th St. hom e is on the p roposed site, said she h a s n ’t been c o n tacted about the a cq u i­ sition M any o th er residents said they had the plan because no opin io n about they o nly rent their hom es. W illiam M ad d o x , w hose 9 0 0 E. 14th St. hom e is one b lock aw ay from the e x p an sio n , said he w ishes the h o s­ pital w ould buy his property because he bought it fo r inv estm en t purposes. “ 1 think it’s (the B rack en rid g e e x p an ­ sion) g en erally good fo r the c ity ,” he said. Spurck said he d o e sn ’t think there w ill be op p o sitio n to the proposed e x ­ pansion because gro u p s there have “ m ade a plea (to the C ity C o u n cil) to the n eig h b o r­ help h o o d .” revitalize them But a n o th er resident in the area, K athy F ears, said she w ouldn t be su rp rise d if there w as a lot ol o p p o si­ tion. “ 1 d o n 't know o f anybody w h o ’s been c o n tacted by the city for the e x ­ p a n s io n ,” she said. “ W e d o n ’t want to give up o ur n e ig h b o rh o o d .” F e a rs’ 810 E. 13th St. h o m e, w hich w as built at the turn o f the c en tu ry , is a C ity o f A ustin historical site. T he bo ard also plans to acq u ire land from the hospital s south side to E ast 11th S tre et, betw een IH 35 and Red R iv er S tre et, S purck said. land C itin g increasing p rice s, S purck said the purchases should be c o n sid ere d qu ick ly . “ But that doesn t m ean p u rch asin g all the land at on ce; we have to look at it w ithin r e a s o n ,” he said. T he E ast A ustin e xpansion will be the last part o f a five-phase m aster p lan , w h ich S purck said should be co m p le te d in 15 o r 20 years. N o land p u rch ases are n ecessary for the p la n ’s first three p h ases, but board m em b e r Ed A dam s said if the C ity C o u n cil accepts the m aster plan “ the city w ill have to acquire additional la n d s .” T he first phase, called B racken­ ridge 2 ,0 0 0 , already has received a p ­ proval from the council and the T exas H ealth F acilities C o m m issio n and is e x p ected to be co m p leted in spring o r fall 1986. A ustin voters approved a $50 m il­ lion bond issue last year to finance this p h ase, w hich will include the a d ­ dition o f an 82-bed c h ild re n 's h o sp i­ tal, an ex p an d e d em ergency ro o m , a critical care unit and a rehabilitation program . T he second phase will include the addition o f a p sy chiatric facility and the ex p an sio n o f the w o m e n ’s hospital and the bed tow er. T he to w er can have eig h t floors added to it. T he third phase will include the re­ m odeling o f the central kitch en , lau n ­ dry and supply area and exp an d in g the critical care unit. T he fourth phase will use the p ro ­ posed southern exp an sio n for offices, c lin ics, additional parking and a life- care facility. T he last phase will use the proposed E ast A ustin e xpansion for the co n stru ctio n o f a league house, service c en ter and a com m unity e d u ­ cation building. No fear of flying Travis Spradling, Daily Texan S taff Isaac B assis takes to the sky w ith a little support from his u ncle, B obby B a ssis, at A uditorium S hores S unday. Textbook guideline issue grows By SARAH DUKE Daily Texan S taff T h e co n tro v e rsy betw een scientists and c rea tio n ists con tin u es to be an is­ sue w ith the state B oard o f E ducation resp o n sib le fo r setting textbook g u id e ­ lines fo r T ex a s public schools. A tto rn ey G eneral Jim M attox is­ sued a ru lin g M arch 12 stating the b o a rd ’s ru les regarding e v o lu tio n are in vio latio n o f the First and F ourteenth am e n d m en ts to the U .S . C onstitution. T he b o a rd ’s ru les, issued S ept. 29, 1983, require tex tb o o k s that include the theory o f e v olution to identify it only as one o f several e x p lan atio n s o f the o rig in s o f h um ankind. T he board a lso requires that these boo k s carry a statem ent on the intro­ du cto ry page stating that any m aterial on e v o lu tio n included in the book be rather c le arly presen ted as than verified . T hese rules becam e e f­ fective O ct. 24, 1983. theory, ruling M a tto x 's the board failed to dem o n strate a secular p u rpose fo r these req u irem en ts. stated that “ W e see this (the ruling) as a sig­ nificant v ictory fo r science education and the F irst A m e n d m e n t,” said M ike H u d so n , sp o k esm an for People fo r the A m erican W ay , an o rganization that ad v o ca te s teach in g o f scientific th eo ries. “ T hese rules that lim it the teach in g o f e v o lu tio n are ju st one a s­ pect o f the national creatio n ist m ove­ m ent to replace science w ith re lig ­ io n ,” H udson said Sunday. the “ T hey (the state board) d o n ’t re ­ ally have to change their ru le s ,” said R ichard A rn ett, d eputy co m m issio n er for legal services w ith the State E du­ c atio n A gency. “ R egardless o f w hat they d o , it w o n 't change the w ay kids le a rn ,” he said. A m e tt said the board has no official resp o n se and does not plan to d iscuss the ru lin g until its m eeting in A pril. H udson said his org an izatio n will be at the A pril m eeting to call on the board to repeal its S ep tem b er ruling. “ If the ru les are not rep ealed , o ur o r­ g an izatio n w ill file suit to require that they be re p e a le d ,” he said. "I'VE ALWAYS WANTED TO LEARN MORE ABOUT THE BIBLE, BUT LEARNING ALONE is hard." Q uite frankly, it's not much fun to read the Bible w ith o u t sharing your insights or your struggles w ith other people. Tuesday night d inner and Bible study at University Presbyterian Church is a group of learning, sharing, and struggling Bible students. If you w ould like to struggle w ith us, we invite you to join us for d inner and study Tuesday evenings. We promise only two thirrgs: You'll eat a good dinner and you'll meet some interesting people. It's the best free food since manna fell from heaven. And you do n't have to eat it off the ground. D inner is at 6:30. (dow nstairs) Class is fro m 7:00-8:00. (upstairs) Store Guad®'uPe Geare . 472-9433 Q Uada\^Pe University Presbyterian Church 2203 San Antonio St. (behind the Co-op) No reservations are necessary. If you w ant m ore in fo rm a tio n , call N eill M organ at U niversity Presbyterian C hurch (476-5321). It's also a bookcase And altogether it's one of the handsom est and m ost functional pieces o l furm ture you'll find. The price is nice, to o ' Our 2-piece desk set is made in Denm ark w ith richly-grained oak or teak veneers, and the shelves are adjustable. Bookcase is 3 5 1/2 w id e x 74 0 high x 11' deep Purchased separately, desk and bookcase total $213. Come see a design that gives you all storehouse 2402 Highland Mall, 459-3161 (Mon.-Sat.10-9) By ANNE MASCHKA Daily Texan Staff Huntsville lay shrouded in early m orning fog W ednesday, the day o f Jam es A utry’s execution. The little tow n, nestled up to the W alls prison com plex, waited silently — the square deserted, the am ber lights forming halos along the streets. The approach to Huntsville from Austin follows a lonely road dwarfed by dark pine trees. Few people travel this road at night. The W alls sits on a knoll not far from the highw ay, and that night I had no trouble finding it. State patrol offi­ cers ringed the area with yellow plas­ tic tape three inches wide. “ DO NOT C R O S S ," a sign read. The first officer demanded my name and my press pass, asking what paper I represented. "T h e Daily T ex­ a n 1 answ ered. He looked at me blankly, his peach- fuzzed face registering nothing. “ Go ahead. The m edia people are in the m idd le.” He lifted the tape. A nother officer, bull-necked and m elon-bellied, blocked my way through the next tape. 1 pushed my way through the spectators, past the guard in gray and entered the media ring. There the cam eras and the reporters swarm ed tow ard the next news event — first an official em erging from the entrance to the W alls, next a sign urg­ ing the state to continue executions. P r o t e st K is s in g e r THURS. 2-4 March 22 LBJ Library (U.T. campus) C.I.S.P.E.S. and others T ri-T o w ers on 2 4 th N£0rA, Page 8/The DaHy Texan/Monday, March 19,1984 Somber atmosphere prevails during Autry execution then filming and interviews with can­ dle-holding m em bers of A m nesty In­ ternational, a group opposed to the death penalty. The authorities corralled the media between the old red-bricked W alls and the new red-bricked annex. Inmates make the red bricks. Journalists moved from place to place like frightened cow s, first stick­ ing their heads out over the tape, then running to the opposite side of the pen. Once inside, 1 turned to look at the Walls. It rose what seem ed to be 10 stories above m e, and at its gabled top shone a the Roman numerals ticking o ff the hours and minutes rem aining in A utry's life. lighted clock, The yard light revolved tow ard me, blinding me for an instant, illum inat­ ing the scene briefly. Suddenly the light disappeared, and the air cooled. To my right the spectators huddled. Next to them stood the inmate craft store. The annex, which faces the W alls, hosted m icrophones bristling from a podium. A public address speaker buzzed slightly. Men in dark suits the podium . Some stood behind laughed, others drank coffee quietly. A covey o f reporters fluttered to my left. I follow ed like a good bird dog. There, by the concession pavilion, amidst the coffee urns and ringing telephones, sat a man in a cleric’s col­ lar who identified him self as Father 7 'm trying to adjust to the fact that a man is going to die ... This was planned. I feel empty ... and, um, somehow I have a strange feeling of being responsible for his death, too. Vm a member of this society, and someone is making this deci­ sion Jack M cGinnis o f H ouston. M icrophones poked at M cG innis, who blinked under the bright cam era lights and spoke softly. McGinnis said he was a friend of one o f A utry’s victim s, form er priest Joe Broussard, and visited Autry to express forgiveness for his friend’s death. “ I sat dow n and he squatted down on the floor o f the c e ll,” M cG innis said. “ Then I expressed forgiveness. “ T hat’s when he began to cry, and he said, T wish 1 could go back and change it all — make it that it d id n ’t happen.’ ” A fter I approached M cGinnis and asked if this was the first execution he had attended. He said it was. the hoopla, “ I’m trying to adjust to the fact that a man is going to die ... This was planned,” he said. “ I feel empty ... and, um , som ehow I have a strange feeling of being responsible for his death, too. I'm a m em ber o f this soci­ ety, and som eone is m aking this deci­ sio n .” — Father Jack McGinnis I left M cG innis standing at a tree, looking up at the huge clock. It read 11:31. As the clock ticked on, attention shifted to the crowd o f approxim ately 250 people. Some held signs, some wore cow boy h ats' with pheasant feathers, some cradled candles. The m urm ur was punctuated with occasional shouts. “ I hope he fries in hell for what he d id ,” a w oman shouted. “ He deserves w o rse,” a man called. A young blond-haired man said, “ 1 think if you let Autry get off, th a t’s legalized murder. “ It sets some sort of a precedent ... It will let people know that if they do (kill), they will not go u npunished.” A callow -looking youth in a trench coat dragging on a big cigar added. “ If it was my m other. I’d probably go on a v endetta.” swelled as The murm uring the clock hands swept toward 12:01 a .m ., the time Autry would leave his cell and head toward the death cham ber. Some m em bers o f the crow dcount- ed down: “ Five, four, three, two, o n e .” And a loud belch followtd. the television cam era panned crowd, recording one frolicker saving, “ H i, Mom. Hi, M om .” A Then the journalists turned tovard the clock and waited as the heckling increased. A walkie-talkie in the hands o f the woman sitting next to me croaled, “ Are you powered up?” Most o f us sat alone, side by side, like crows sitting on a wire. Few spoke. Restlessness struck at 12:25 a.m. The reporters moved toward the Walls entrance, sensing som ething. It was apparently nothing but our own anxie­ ty- The journalists started talking to one another at 12:41 a.m . We must have felt A utry’s death. Press International. He chronicled Au­ try ’s w incing, his grim acing, his struggling against the straps holding his body to the gum ey. Autry refused to make a final state­ ment to the 23 w itnesses, but he spoke his last words to Shirley T adlock, an assistant office manager from Houston who had befriended him after his first night spent on the gum ey last O cto­ ber. He had escaped death that time. Autry looked at Tadlock and said, “ I love y o u .” nounced dead. At 12:40 a.m . Autry was pro­ The media shoved their m icro­ phones closer to record Texas A ttor­ ney General Jim M attox’s comm ents. He announced the executions would go on, saying he expected 10 to 12 before the end of the year. The crowd had disappeared, m erg­ ing with the fog. The cackling laugh of a woman in the crowd earned across the com ­ pound. An officer brought out a box with legal pads sticking out o f the top and placed it in the back seat. At 12:45 a.m . the witnesses em ­ erged. The media pool mem bers who watched the actual execution briefed us from the podium in front of the annex. Michael G raczyk of Associated Press described the scene. His face blushed red and tears welled in his eyes. The lethal injection was not a pain­ less death, said Gary Taylor o f United After the sputtering car left, the re­ porters closed their notepads and the camera operators packed their gear. One team recorded its closing cut. through her The reporter stumbled sentence. The fog had grown thicker. As I walked toward my car, I fol­ lowed another news team . W hen they reached their car, the reporter turned to the cameraman and said, “ Well, another day, another 32 c e n ts." TOEFL WORKSHOP BEGINNING MARCH 19 — MORNING CLASSES — 4 WEEK INTENSIVE COURSE AUTHORIZED UNDER FEDERAL LAW TO ENROLL NON-IMMIGRANT ALIEN STUDENTS 1-20 FORM DURHAM-NIXON CLAY COLLEGE 119 W. 8th, 2nd Floor 478-1602 IMMIGRATION Permanent Resident or Temporary Employment Visas PAUL PARSONS PC. Attorney at Law BOARD CERTWBD • M M GRATUN & NATIONALITY LAW TEXAS BOARD OF UEGAL SPECIALIZATION 2200 Guadalupe, Suite 216 477-7887 A p a ★ FOR ENTIRE M EN U REFER TO THE STUDEI ■ST U D E N T DIRECTORY Super-Bert 2 FOR $2.59 Sa v e $1.09 QUARTER PO UNDER I I ,O n Whole Wheat" C O U P O N REDEEMED IN STORE O N L Y 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. D aily • 3303 N. Lam ar «452-2317 Come in and see our new Spring line-up including the official LONGHORN KNIT SHIRT. This newly arrived 100% cotton knit shirt in the classic polo style is available in many colors. Come by and shop our entire stock of spring fashions. d tasn off’s lUto. 9:30-6:00*2324 Guadalupe*472-9709 25% Off v HARDBACK & PAPERBACK y BESTSELLERS* FREE! New Y ork Tim es Book R eview to first 20 Best Seller p u rc h a se rs, every week! HARDBACK HARDBACK FICTION 1. A cquitaine P rogression, Robert Ludlum. NON-FICTION 1. M ayor, Edward I. Kock. Reg. $17.95..............................................................C O O P $13.45. Reg $17.95.............................................................C O O P $13.45. 2. P et Sem atary, Stephen King. Reg. $15.95 3. A lm ost P aradise, S. Isaacs Reg. $16.95.............................................................. CO O P $12.70. 4. Sm art Women, Judy Blume. Reg. $15.95..............................................................CO O P $11.95. 5. Who Killed the Robins Family?, Bill Adler. C O O P $11.95. Reg. $15.95.............................................................COOP $11.95. 2. Lines & S hadow s, Joseph Wambaugh. 2. M otherhood: T he S econd O ldest P ro fessio n , Erm a Bombeck Reg. $12.95.............................................. C O O P $9.70. 4. T ough T im es N ever Last, b u t T ouch P eo p le Do!, Robert H. Schuller. Reg. $12 95.......................................... C O O P $9.70. 5. On Wings o f Eagles, Ken Follett. Reg. $9.95.............• .................................................... CO O P $7.45. Reg. $17.95...............................................................COOP $13.45. 6. P oland, Jam es A. Michener. 6. In Search o f Excellence, Thomas J. Peters. Reg $17.95..............................................................CO O P $13.45. Reg $19.95...............................................................COOP $14.95. 7. The Nam e o f the Rose, Umberto Eco. 7. The D iscoverers, Daniel J. Boorstin. Reg $15.95..............................................................CO O P $11.45. Reg. $25.00...............................................................COOP $18.75. 8. Night Sky, Clare Francis. Reg $16.95.............................................................. CO O P $12.70. 9. The B utter B attle Book, Dr. Seuss. Reg. $6.95............................................................ E CO O P $5.20. 10. Lord o f the D ance, Andrew M. Greeley. * 8. The B est o f Jam es Herriot, Jam es Herriot. Reg $19.95 COOP $14.95. 9. Tough Minded Faith, for Tender H earted P eop le, Robert H. Schuller. Reg $14.95.......................................COOP $11.20. 10. Approaching Hoofbeats, Billy Graham. Reg $17.50..............................................................CO O P $13.10. Reg. $11.95.................................................................COOP $8.95. 11. The Story o f Henri Tod, William F. Buckley Jr.. 11. P eop le o f the Lie, M. Scott Peck. Reg $14.95 12. T he Berlin Game, Len Deighton. Reg. $15.95..............................................................CO O P $11.95. 12. Jou rn eyer, Gary Jennings. Reg. $17.95.............................................................. COOP $13.45. 14. C h a n g es, Danielle Steel. 12. The March o f Folly, B arbara Tuchman. Reg. $18.95......................................................... w COOP $14.20. 13. Further Up the O rganization, Robert Townsend. N Reg. $15.95.............................................................. COOP $11.95. & 14. One Writer’s Beginnings, Eudora Welty. COOP $11.20. n CO O P $11.20. Reg $14.95 Reg. $15.95................................................................CO O P $11.95. Reg. $10.00.................................................................COOP $7.50. 15. Unto T his Hour, Tom Wicker. n 15. A Light in the Attic, Shel Silverstein. Reg. $19.95...........................................................w COOP $14.95. Reg. $12.95.................................................................COOP $9.70. J J j MAJORING IN SERVICE SINCE 1896 VISA MC FREE I HR PA R K IN G WITH M P l'R t'H A S K second level AS L IS T E D IN I H E NEW Y OK E T I M E S ,(£(gK^n$i R ey n o ld s-P en la n d in trod u ces C O L O U R S C O L L E C T IO N by A lex a n d er Julian T h e fa s h io n a rtis try o f A le x a n d e r J u lia n is m i r r o r e d in th is u p b e a t c o lle c tio n o f C o lo u rs s p o r ts w e a r. T h e C o lo u rs lo o k re fle c ts “ m o d e r n tr a d it io n a l” ...b rid g in g th e g ap b e tw e e n E u r o p e a n a n d tr a d itio n a l sty lin g . T h e sp o rts s h irts a r e full c u t, o v e rs iz e d ...th e c o lo r a tio n s a r e s p e c ta c u la r ...th e d e sig n s a r e e x c itin g ly d iffe re n t. ♦ C o tto n m a d r a s lo n g sle e v e sp o rts sh irts , fe a tu rin g th e n e w J u lia n b u tto n d o w n , s p re a d c o lla r . $ 2 8 .5 0 . ♦ C o tto n k n its in p iq u e a n d je r s e y k n it, v e rtic le strip e s a n d p a n e ls . F r o m $ 2 8 . ♦ A ll c o tto n o x fo rd a n d 6 0 sin g le s fa n c y d re s s s h irts in b u tto n d o w n , s p r e a d c o lla rs . F r o m $ 3 0 . • N e c k w e a r in c o tto n , k n its , m a d r a s a n d silk . $ 1 3 .5 0 -$ 2 0 . Reynolds -Penland D A L L A S • A U S T I N • T Y L E R ♦ C lo th in g G entlem en Since 1929 ♦ U n iv ersity ♦ P h o n e 476-7676 ♦ 9-6 M on -Sat. FACULTY & STAFF SPECIAL $12.00 off 1st cut Kroy Copy Center Opens i i America’s Brightest New Retail Concept” Kroy Inc. is opening a new copy center in Austin termed "America’s brightest new retail concept.” The Kroy Copy Center features: Copying and duplicating services to create art work with Kroy Lettering, signs, Emery overnight delivery services and express serve copies. "The Kroy Copy Center® is more than a normal copy shop, we have an innovative service concept where by customers can develop their hand written looking Flyers, Resumes, Reports, Newsletters, Visual presentation aids, Signs, or whatever ... faster and less expensive than before”, said Bob Crain, President of Kroy Inc. into professional ideas In addition to Kroy 80K Keyboard Lettering machines, we also provide state-of-the-art typewriters, layout supplies, work stations, and copying m achines for customers use." The Kroy Copy Center® is located at 809 Congress Avenue in the heart of Austin’s business community and only minutes from the University of Texas campus. Bruce M. Berger is the Copy Center Manager. Other Kroy Copy Centers are located in Phoenix, Tucson, Tempe, Las Colinas, Chi­ c a g o and Manhattan. Kroy Copy Center 809 Congress Ave. Austin, TX 78701 479-6185 Opening Week of March 19th South Padre Island greets thousands The M y Texan/Monday, March 19,1964/Page 9 Prepare for: JUNE 18 By LISA BAKER Daily Texan Staff Every spring since the 1960s, thou­ sands o f college students have pushed books and lecture notes aside and m i­ grated to South Padre Island for sun, sand and relaxation. And spring break '84 was no excep­ tion. “ They just com e over that bridge, and they’re h e re ,’’ said Colleen Car- nevale, Port Isabel-South Padre Island Cham ber of Com m erce promotions director. “ And they’re everywhere. Over the four w eeks, we estimate just over 100,000 students come down to Padre for their spring break.’’ Jim Shelton, ow ner of a shop on Padre Boulevard, said. “ We have a city population of 700 people, and we grow from 700 to an instant popula­ tion o f 50,000. “ This is a good break from the classroom ,’’ he added, “ just to get the hell out for a few days. It’s like a release for them ... from the snow ­ storms, from the classroom s — they get down here and they love it, they have a b all.” The spring break vacation period, which stretches from the end of Feb­ ruary to the end of M arch, brings sun- worshipping students island from Texas, O klahom a, Kansas, Illi­ nois, Iowa and many other states. Cam evale estim ated that 3,000 stu­ dents arrive from Colorado alone. the to When asked what he did over spring break at South Padre. Universi­ ty of O klahom a student Mike Mel- chert responded: “ Drank. What else is there to d o ?” “ W e’ve just heard a lot o f nice sto­ ries about the place,” said University of Illinois student Mike Dunton. His group traveled 26 hours on a bus from Illinois, where it was snowing when they left. “ So w e’re going to get some postcards and send them back hom e,” Dunton said. Spring break activities, sponsored by national sponsors and coordinated by the C ham ber o f C om m erce, have a long history on the island, C am evale said. “ Budweiser really got things going, and then M iller joined in and it’s just grown from th e re,” she said. At the south end o f the island, Budweiser spnosored m essage centers and a W ats line service, at which stu­ dents could call anyw here in the U nit­ ed States for three m inutes, free of charge. to volleyball games and video arcades, Budweiser sponsored a can exchange, at which Frisbees, T-shirts and other prizes were traded for a certain num ber of aluminum cans. In addition Budweiser also sponsored a beach concert March 15 featuring the duo Jan and Dean. The Molson G olden prom otion in­ cluded a sand-ski race. “ The students have to strap cross country skis to their feet and run through an obstacle course with these skis o n ,” Cam evale said. “ Moving further north, we have the Strohs prom otion,” C am evale said. “ For $1, the kids get their pic­ tures taken in front o f an inflatable can. They also get a T -shirt, a can koozie, a poster and a beachbag.” Coppertone passed out suntan lo- ACGtn Community Collese Come live the European Experience! You can earn college credit for World Masterpieces of Literature while touring Europe July 18 to August 9. England • France • Germany Switzerland • Austria For more information call 495-7328 or 447- 5404. 11IMTU IIHI 11 1.41 O N YOUR LU N C H H O U R O R BETWEEN CLASSES SAMPLE O UR SPECIALS O N SPECIAL BO O K S H u Tt-f t Í 25% OFF ALL PHOTOGRAPHY BOOKS Mondoy thru Friday 12-2 p.m. ONLY! G e n e r a l H o o k s — s e c o n d le v e l i i i i B n a & j J SKBV1CK SIN C I 1 8 9 6 37% larger 35mm color prints from Kodak at no extra charge! mognapnnt v service f Ask for MAGNAPRINT35 Service by Kodak and receive big 4" x 6" KODAK Color Prints for the same price as regular 3ft* x 5" prints. Hurry, this special offer ends March 28, r T I - O O x camera Bettie Hatch ■ Fans listen as Joe ‘King’ C arrasco gives a free concert at South Padre Island. tion sam ples and sponsored the "ru b and w in” contest, C am evale said The object of the game was to rub the entire contents o f a lotion sample tube into a partner’s body as fast as possi­ ble. In addition to orange juice chugg­ ing, empty beer-keg throwing and best legs contests, the Skoal Bandits sponsored an unusual tug-of-w ar con­ test, C am evale said. “ They have a big tug o f w ar, and the losers get dragged into a giant m argarita,” she said. C am evale said the margarita, concocted in a sand pit on the beach, was chosen because Jimmy B uffett’s song, “ Margarita- ville.” is considered the anthem of the island. Miller Beer sponsored a can ex­ change as well as a free beach concert featuring Joe “ K ing” Carrasco. The sponsors o f such activities do not make money from the prom otions, lose m oney, C am evale said. they “ Budweiser loses alm ost a quarter of a million dollars on their spring break perform ances,” she said. “ (But) they want to be down here where the kids a re .” Enlargements & Reductions 154% 130% 100% 98% 94% 74% 65% NEW AT KINKO’S! sgtnal leads, a re n t ! w a tt kinko's copies 2200 Guadalupe 4 7 6 -4 6 5 4 2913MedicalArts 4 7 6 -3 2 4 2 EXPERIENCE Jk. * SPERRY PERSONAL COMPUTER HHp* A free hands-o n : DEMONSTRATION TODAY! Center Aisle— street level ¡tu i i i'i * ;ki k MAJORING IN SKRVICK SINCE 1896 The Sperry, what the personal computer should have been tn the first ptoce. HELP RECOGNIZE OUTSTANDING PROFESSORS Nominate your best professor fora 1984 TEXAS EXCELLENCE TEACHING AWARD $1000 award to an outstanding teacher in each college Selection is entirely by students through college council selection committees Provided by The Ex-Students' Association Nomination forms are available in your 3 0 dean's office and/or college council office Deadline for nominations: 5:00 p.m.-March 22,1984 Nominations and selection are entirely by students Your nomination will count! SEVENTEEN AME DAY LOCATIONS. ZRVKE. We call them "Fast Stops”. Actually, they’re just little Back-In-A- Flash photo labs. Without the labs. And they’re all over the place. So you don’t have to drive all over the place looking for one. So, when you need color film or color film processing, shoot in to the Back-1 n- A-Flash Fast Stop nearest you. With seventeen locations, there’s probably one in your neighborhood. Just drop off your color film at any Fast Stop location. Then, later that same day, swing back by and pick up your pictures. That’s all there is to it. No other drive-thru photo processor can do that for you. At least not all in the same day. And not in the same professional Back-In-A-Flash way. BACKINA FIA.H NORTH 1911) Briarcliff A ve H923 Airport Blvd • 9448 Parkfield • 2900 W. Anderson Lane 8004 Mesa D rive CENTRAL 802 C ongress 1914 Guadalupe • 2718 Guadalupe • 2742 E xposition Blvd SOUTH 5708 Manchara Rd 1819 W est Ben W hite 205 O ltorf S treet 1900A K. R iverside K M X ) S. Lamar Blvd 204 W. T aylor A ve Bound Rock, T exas ■ 920 N. A ustin A ve ■ G eorgetow n, T exas ■ 110 A. Lake D rive Taylor f*.x / ? y-r. - S \ , \ x j m S XXvJBL Page KVThe Daly Texan/Monday, March 19,1964 L O O K I N G F O R A DENTIST Aak t r r r x n f j c x w '.m e n Q i*ncfl» a re oné of y o u r f r t a n d j haa b e e n to o u r o ffic e W e've b e e n In t h e UT a r e a for 10 y e a r* W IL S O N S M IT H D.D.S. 2222 Rio Grande #D112 3 b its west of UT Tower 476-7781 C c s /{> h i $ C a f e — 24th & San Antonio O pen Every Night Until 1:30 Open at 10:30 a.m. 7 d ays a week H appy Hour Mon.-Fri. 5-7 NING SKILLS CCNKfl More than just / ! a RASSL now " Enrolling this week lor classes e Reducing Speech Anxiety t Reducing Test Anxiety • Stop Procrastinating • Study Techniques • College Reading SkHls • Speed Reading • 6RE Review •■■■ A m C o A A l l l e e e e A. T a n H iv u i f « p v i i i n j a Punctuation Test Review Jester Center A332 M -F 9-5 471-3614 Four to contend for Co-Op boar By JILL KHIEW Daily Texan Staff The University Co-Op election commission has certified four candi­ dates eligible to run for two student board positions to be vacated in April. The candidates are: Nasr Ullah, sophomore; engineering electrical Corey Peterson, natural sciences sen­ ior; Ann Ritter, nutrition/pre-med sophomore; and Christopher Girardot, liberal arts sophomore. Co-Op board secretary Charles Walker said the number of students who filed their candidacy is “ about normal,” although many more stu­ dents picked up materials about the election. Unlike the student government eli­ gibility requirements, the board does not impose academic restrictions on the candidates, Walker said. “ We only require them to be full­ time students and be from different schools,” Walker said, adding the lat­ ter restriction is to have a varied repre­ sentation. Campaigning will begin Monday with the election scheduled March 28. A runoff, if required, is scheduled for April 2. Texas Student Publications election for The Daily Texan editor and three other TSP board members, Walker said, so as to generate a higher voter turnout. “ The method of voting will be the same as that of the recent student gov­ ernment election,” Walker said. De­ spite the computerized voting, Walker said the board hopes to set up at least six voting booths this year. An addi­ tional booth also will be set up for students with voting problems, he said. The election coincides with the The two positions, to be vacated by Walden Swanson and Bill Heinze, both graduate students, are for two- year terms beginning in May. Walker said the student board members will act as the Co-Op’s poli­ cy-makers, making decisions on mer­ chandising, book buyback, the patron­ age refund amount and the purchase or sale of Co-Op properties. The Co-Op board is composed of 11 members: four faculty members, four student members, two non-voting Co-Op employees and the Co-Op president. Complaint halts sale of patriotic blouses United Press International for $15 each. SPRINGFIELD, Ore. — A wom­ an’s complaint to a department store that was selling blouses decorated with the Stars and Stripes was heard in 350 stores across the nation. Vicki Travis, a part-time delivery­ woman and mother of three, tele­ phoned the manager of a Montgomery Ward’s store in Springfield last week after spotting the blouses on sale there Travis cited a section from a Ma­ rine Corps pamphlet on care and dis­ play of the flag that read, “ Do not use the flag as a portion of a costume or athletic uniform.” She said that to her, that meant blouses as well. Three days later, she called store manager Terry Cummings again to see what action had been taken. “ He said he’d been waiting to hear from me and that Wards had removed the blouses from 350 stores nation­ wide,” she said. “ Oh, my gosh, it's unbelievable.” She said she had asked only that the blouses be removed from the Spring­ field store. “ I’ve always had respect for the flag,” said Travis, whose father was one of the last members of the Army’s horse cavalry before it was disbanded. As for Ward’s decision not to carry the blouses, Travis said, “ I have a feeling there’s a really patriotic man somewhere who helped make the de­ cision. “ It’s a small victory in a way, but it means so much to me. I can’t help but feel there are so many other Ameri­ cans who agree with me. I guess I just decided it was time to stand up and be counted.” M1BISIVE CARER TRAINING COMPUTER PROGRAMMING BUSINESS ADM/MGMT. EXECUTIVE ASSUWORD PROCESSING DRAFTING/ELECTRONICS FINANCIAL AID/JOB PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE 478-1602 BEGINNING MARCH 19 A Fine Dinnerhouse, The Velvet Turtle is Coming to Austin For years, discerning diners have enjoyed the warm, intim ate atmosphere found in Saga Corporation’s fine restaurants. Now we’re coming to Austin — in the G ranada Royale Hometel — where our tradition continues with atten­ tive, professional service, creatively prepared meals of the finest quality, affordable prices and absolutely great opportunities for EXPERIENCED res­ tau ran t personnel in the following positions. Dining Room W ait Persons * Bussers * Cocktail Servers Kitchen Saute Cook * Prep Cook * Pantry * Utility Room Service Banquet Personnel As an employee of Saga Corporation’s new R estaurant M anagement Divi­ sion, you will eiyoy an outstanding benefit plan and the security of our well- established reputation for excellence. % BICYCLES m bled with meticulous cart. Fiat bicyelm i f •• > Huge selection A best prices on all bicycle accessories including: Gloves, shoes, Jerseys A shorts Kktiend & Edpse bicycle touring packs Spedelzed tires end tubes “Quality A Service are the difference. ” 2404 San Gabriel 477-6846 APPLY IN PERSON 9:00 AM-5:00 March 19-23 Granada Royale Hometel 6901 N. IH-35, Austin South of U.S. 290 off Interstate 35 Equal Opportunity Employer Corporation PLEASE ORDER YOURS NOW MAY GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS & NAME CARDS ORDERS CANNOT BE ACCEPTED AFTER APRIL 25. CLASS RINGS s t r t f l U'vtl v. V \: * \ v: . v . v\ • \ \ \ \ \ t \ X SPRING IS HERE! WE’VE REMODELED THE STORE- COME IN SOON AND SEETHE FRESH NEW LOOKS Dobie Mall T h e CIn ic o r n A Gift Store as Unique as its Name! 2021 Guadalupe 477-0719 J MASTER Lecture Note Service Accuracy • Dependability • Service — qualified notetakers — wordprocessing — sentence outline form structures the material and aids in studying — high quality copies on drilled paper — single notes available — complete line of magazines ACCEPT N O SUBSTITUTIONS Current Spring 1984 Notes for: AST 301 Douglas AST 301 Shapiro AST 301 Netzer BIO 301K Nelson BIO 301L Harris BIO 302 Bloch BIO 303 Cole CH 302 Oref ECO 302 Poe ECO 303 Pluta FIN 354 Wolf HIS 315K Hall HIS 315L Frantz MKT 337 Anderson, J. GOV 310L Cnudde et al. GOV 310L Prindle GOV 312L Rice GOV312L Jukam GOV 312L Goldman PSY 301 Singh PSY 319K Berman SO C 321K Kurtz Subscription for full semester Notes: $20.00 1 HOUR FREE PARKING IN DOBIE MALL mc-:m #24 D oU * I M • Aurtn •4794682/3 r A NEW CONCEPT IS LECTURE NOTES MAJORING IN SERVICE SINCE 1896 1610 SAN ANT0NIQ ftl4Z6!5419fr % ; , __ _________ s p o rts Hogs, Mustangs fall from tournament Thn Dn>y Texan/Mondfy, March 19,196 VRaga 11 1984 NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Championship Bracket chael M cK enney and Brad Duncan 10 apiece to pace Illi­ nois State, which finished its season at 23-8. In the second gam e, Kenny Green scored 20 points and Anthony Teachey contributed 15 rebounds to give Wake Forest the decision over Kansas. Wake Forest and No. 4 DePaul will meet in a M idwest Regional semifinal in St. Louis next w eekend. The 6-9 Teachey also scored 13 points as Wake Forest im proved to 22-8. Lee G arber added nine points for the Atlantic C oast C onference school. At Pullm an, W ash., Patrick Ewing tipped in a missed foul shot w ith 51 seconds left and Michael Jackson added an insurance free throw with just eight seconds remaining to lift No. 2 G eorgetow n to the narrow decision over Southern M ethodist in an NCAA West Regional game. G eorgetow n, 30-3, will meet Nevada-Las Vegas in the W est R egionals in Los Angeles next weekend Ewing finished with 10 points and seven rebounds to lead G eorgetow n in both categories as the Hoyas substitut­ ed freely. The Hoyas may have been showing the effects o f an eight-day layoff. SM U , w hich finished 25-8 for the year, was led by Jon Koncak with 13 points and Larry Davis with 12. The M us­ tangs outrebounded G eorgetow n 31-24. “ They (SM U) made me very nervous until the buzzer went o ff,” G eorgetow n coach John Thompson said. “ They were a lot bigger than I thought they would be. I am going to have to stop looking at films and go to gam es.” Thom pson was not in Pullman Friday night when SMU and junior center Koncak beat Miami o f Ohio to advance to their second-round game with the Hoyas. He had kept his team sequestered in Spokane, 75 miles to the north of Pullman, ever since com ing out west in mid-week. “ I think we played a very fine team and 1 am fortunate to w in ,” Thom pson said, admitting that the SMU game was far from the H oyas’ best this season. “ You alw ays want to get the first game under your b elt,” he said. “ I hope that’s the bad ballgam e we have to get out o f our system s.” Kentucky Louisville Maryland Illinois Georgetown Nevada-Las Vegas Washington Dayton North Carolina Indiana Syracuse Virginia DePaul Wake Forest M em phis St. Houston United Press International Syracuse and Virginia both made travel plans for the same destination Sunday: A tlanta, where the two schools will meet when the NCAA East Regional resum es T hurs­ day night. At East Rutherford, N .J., Syracuse earned the trip south by defeating Virginia C om m onw ealth 78-63 as Rafael A d­ dison scored 24 points and the O rangem en's man-to-man defense overw helm ed the tenacious Rams. Earlier, Virginia dow ned Arkansas 53-51 in overtim e on Rick C arlisle’s jum per from the com er with four seconds left following a blocked shot. Syracuse and Virginia will be joined in Atlanta by North Carolina and Indiana, who meet each other Thursday night in the other semifinal contest. Virginia C om m onw ealth, w hich em ploys flash cards on the sidelines to signal its defense, stayed with No. 16 Syracuse until late in the second half. The Rams pulled to 59-57 on a bank shot by Don Franco with 6:33 left, but the O rangemen ran off 14 consecutive points and sealed the win with a strong man-to-m an defense that held the Rams scoreless for more than six minutes. The 23-8 O rangem en, who overcam e a nine-point defi­ cit in the first half, also had strong work from Dwayne W ashington with 18 points and Sean Kerins with 16. The Ram s, 23-7, were led by M ike Schlegel with 16 points and 14 rebounds, while C alvin Duncan had 14 and Michael Brown 10. In the opener, Carlisle, a 6-5 guard, atoned with his shot for two bad passes late in the gam e, which was tied 49-49 at the end o f regulation. With the score 51-51 and Virginia working for a last shot. Otheil W ilson had his shot from the side blocked by Alvin Robertson but the ball was deflected to Carlisle, who had peeled off toward the right baseline where he was to be W ilson’s second option. C arlisle then hit the 14- footer with four seconds left and sprinted to the other end o f the floor, arms raised in trium ph, and waited for his teammates to surround him. “ You mean after that set play?” C arlisle later said jo k ­ ingly when he asked to recall his thoughts after the w in­ ning shot. “ I’d taken a lot o f those kinds of shots this year, but not too many o f them have fallen. I’m just glad this one worked o u t.” Carlisle also had seven assists and six rebounds. W ilson led his team with 13 points. Syracuse and V irginia, advancing to the regional sem ifi­ nals, will face each other on Thursday at the Omni in Atlanta For No. 7 Arkansas. 25-7, Joe Kleine scored 15 points and Robertson had 14 points, eight steals and seven as- The weekend began with the center fielder making a four-leaf clover o f a catch to preserve a St. P atrick’s Day no-hitter. It ended with losing coach fretting about the MX missile. the The Texas baseball team swept Texas W esleyan 6-2 and 10-8 Sunday at D isch-Falk Field, ending a two- day, four-gam e series with the Rams that might be the highlight o f next w eek’s W eird W orld o f Sports. Longhorn left-hander G reg Sw in­ dell, a freshman making his second start o f the season, no-hit a Ram team that has hit 62 hom e runs in 26 gam es to open the series Saturday with a 12- 0 win. Sw indell, 5-0, needed help from freshm an center fielder Elanis W estbrooks, who made tw o running catches o f line drives, the last one at the base o f the wall with one out in the seventh and final inning. Another freshm an, first basem an Randy R ichards, paced 28-4 Texas with in Saturday’s two hom ers nightcap, a 13-3 Texas win. Sunday’s gam es were as conventi­ onal as Pee W ee H erman is m acho. In the first gam e, Steve Labay tossed a five-hitter, then slung his glove in dis­ gust as the last out was m ade. T exas pitcher Bruce Ruffin kept things inter­ esting in the second gam e by w alking the first five men he faced and earning the right to take a trip to the show ers without recording an out. A lso, tw o Ram runners were called out after scoring — one for failing to touch the base, the other for tagging up too quickly. Dr. Frank Fultz, the 33-year-old W esleyan coach who acquired his Ph.D . at the ripe age o f 25, w as philo­ sophical in defeat, and a bit unnerved. “ The kids o f today d o n ’t take loss­ es m ore easily than w hen I p lay ed ,’’ Fultz said. “ I guess that has som e­ thing to do with the M X m issjles in M ontana pointed at M oscow .” If Moscow had been the strike zone Sunday, Ruffin would have missed. His search for and failure to locate home plate gave the Rams a 3-0 lead in threw 23 pitches, three for strikes. inning. He first the Jam es H arris relieved, and the Rams added tw o runs in the second inning for a 5-0 lead. S h e Ram s could have scored m ore, but Randy Foyt, who hit a hom e run Saturday that trav­ eled more than 450 feet, tagged up too soon at third base. The Longhorns answ ered with three runs in the bottom o f the third and took the lead in the fourth with three more runs, tw o o ff Jam ie D oughty’s double. Doughty drove in 10 runs in the four games. The Ram s scored a single run in the fifth, but again fell victim to a base- running error. D esignated hitter Matt Johnson appeared to score from sec­ ond on M ike K uchta’s single to cen­ ter, but um pire Jon Bible said Johnson missed third. “ I that think he (Bible) m issed o n e ,” Fultz said. “ I didn’t argue with him much. I just said ’Jon, there are some awfully strange things happen­ ing out h e re ,’ and he said, ‘Y eah, that seems to be the ca se .’ ” The Ram s took advantage o f a Richards error in the seventh inning to take a 7-6 lead, then used a Bregg Ray hom er in the eighth for an 8-6 advan­ tage. But the Longhorns, adm ittedly weary after playing 17 gam es over spring break, scored four tim es in the eighth to win. Darren Loy and Dennis C ook singled, setting the stage for Fultz’s most difficult decision o f the series. Fultz chose to pull starter Scott Baumann and bring in the side-w’ind- ing Rusty Ford, who com pleted a sev­ en-inning first gam e approxim ately 160 minutes before. If anyone could stop the T exas up- See Baseball, page 14 sists, while Ricky Norton finished with 11 points. In other tournam ent gam es, Louisville defeated Tulsa 69-67 and Illinois dow ned Villanova 64-56 in the M ideast Regional; DePaul routed Illinois State 75-61 and Wake Forest dropped K ansas 69-59 in the M idwest Regional; and G eorgetow n trim m ed Southern M ethodist 37-36 and W ashington topped Duke 80-78 in the West Regional. At M ilw aukee, Milt W'agner hit a spinning 12-foot jum p shot with four seconds rem aining to lift Louisville over Tulsa to advance the C ardinals to a return match with Kentucky in the NCAA M ideast Regional. Lancaster Gordon led Louisville with 17 points, 14 in the first half when the Cards took a 41-28 lead. Charles Jones and W agner each added 15 for the Cards. Ricky Ross led all scorers with 27 points for Tulsa, which ended its season 27-4. Steve H arris added 21, 16 to rally the Golden Hurrricane in the second half. In the second gam e, Illinois used the free throw shoot­ ing o f Bruce Douglas and the inside play o f Efrem W inters to get past Villanova. The Illini, 25-4, will meet M aryland in the regional sem ifinal at L exington, K y., next Thurs­ day. V illanova ended its season 19-12. At Lincoln, N eb., juniors Tyrone Corbin and Kenny Patterson com bined for 34 points to lead No. 4 DePaul to a Midwest Regional thum ping o f Illinois State. In the second gam e, D etlef Schrem pf scored 30 points, including 21 in the second half, to carry the 15th-ranked Huskies to an 80-78 victory over No. 14 Duke. Corbin scored 20 points and Patterson 14 as DePaul extended its winning streak to eight games. Freshm an for­ ward Dallas C om egys also finished in double figures for the Blue Dem ons with 14 points. Johnny D awkins scored 22 points for Duke, which fin­ ished with a 24-10 record. The H uskies, 24-6, will face D ayton in the West Re­ Rickie Johnson scored 14 points and fellow guards M i­ gional sem ifinals in Los A ngeles next weekend. Texas women’s swim team wins national title B y P A U L A B L E S E N E R Daily Texan Staff Airports are usually rather sedate places, but there is always an under­ current of excitem ent as friends and relatives anxiously await arriving pas­ sengers. With the arrival Sunday o f A m eri­ can Airlines flight 213 at Robert M ueller M unicipal Airport, that un­ dercurrent erupted into a tidal wave as curious team m ates, passersby welcomed home T ex as’ 1984 NCAA w om en’s sw im m ing and diving champions. fam ily and “ W e’re thrilled, really ex cited ,” senior Joan Pennington said. “ I know I d o n ’t sound very positive, but it’s because I’m really tired. We re all re­ ally tired .” They have good reason to be tired. The Longhorns took the lead in the third event o f T hursday’s finals at the Indiana U niversity natatorium in Indi­ anapolis and never relinquished it. W hen Saturday’s finals were over, Texas had clinched the title with 392 points. Stanford finished second with 324, followed by Florida, USC and North Carolina. The University o f H ouston picked up 11th place. Texas coach Richard Q uick’s strat­ egy called for the Longhorns to win each of six sessions at the m eet, three preliminary and three final. “ We had to take each session at a tim e,” Q uick said. “ I figured if we did what we had to do, the score would take care o f itself. I w asn’t sure we would win until after the last day of prelim s.” Texas' roll started with Penning­ ton’s win in the 100-yard butterfly. Freshman A gneta Eriksson and Jodi Eyles placed third and fourth, respec­ tively. “ W e set a good pace and kept the mom entum g o in g ,” Pennington said. “ We knew we had to do well the first d ay .” Pennington rounded out her first- day perform ance by taking second place in the 200-yard individual m ed­ ley behind Florida’s Tracy Caulkins. C aulkins’ time o f 1:57.06 set a new American record, one o f four she earned during the meet. Pennington's motivation carried through the entire meet. She swam in the national cham pion 200-yard free­ style and 400-yard medley relays and took second to Caulkins again in the 100-yard breaststroke. Both top fin­ ishers’ times bettered the old NCAA meet record. “ I felt I could have sw um faster in the 100 b reast,” she said. “ But as it is, I was two seconds off my lifetim e best I fought for it. I went to beat her, but I just got out-tou ch ed .” is especially team ’s victory The sweet senior for Pennington and Dawn Kirchner. Both sw im m ers were in retirem ent when Texas won the 1982 national cham pionship under the now -defunct A ssociation o f Intercol­ legiate Athletics for W omen. “ I ’ve been sw im m ing for four years and I’ve never been part o f a national cham pionship te a m ,” Penn­ ington said. “ It’s really special for both Dawn and me. I guess it’s like going out in style. It means so much to everyone, but to us it’s really, real­ ly special.” Just as Pennington had a rival in C aulkins, freshman Tori Trees faced a in defending form idable opponent cham pion Sue W alsh o f North C aroli­ na in the 100- and 200-yard back­ stroke events. W alsh touched out Trees in both events, by .01 second in the 200 and by . 10 second in the 100. “ I ’m pretty happy with my tim es,” Trees said. “ A fter the Southw est Conference m eet, I d id n’t know if I’d go that much faster, but I cut tw o sec­ onds o ff my time. My goal was to get in the top six. But 1 wish I could have swum faster and beaten Sue W a lsh .” Eriksson, a freshman from Sw eden, won the 100-yard freestyle. She will return to Sw eden this w eek to concen­ trate on O lym pic training. “ O n my last 25 (yards), I d idn ’t see anyone except the Texas sw im m ers standing on the sid e ,” Eriksson said. “ W hen I touched, I d id n ’t w ant to look for a w hile. I didn’t know if I ’d w o n .” Eleven o f T exas’ 18 competitor were freshmen. Nine o f the freshme scored “ The freshmen were g re a t," Q uid said. “ They did what we needed then to do. But we w o uldn’t he any when without the leadership o f the seniors. “ There were two or three team it,” he said that could have won “ We just had the chem istry to do i this year. I don 't know if w e’ll be abi< to do it next y e a r." But Pennington has other ideas. “ With this year’s recruiting, (top- ranked sw im m ers Tiffany Cohen and and Kim Rhodenbaugh have com m it­ ted to Texas) I think Texas will be national cham pions for quite a few years.” UT takes two from Texas Wesleyan Horns rip Drake, advance to Ruston By M I K E B L A C K W E L L Daily Texan Staff By S T A N R O B ER TS Daily Texan Staff The song rem ains the same. The com position o f the Texas w om en’s basketball team changed two weeks ago, but the top-ranked Longhorns continue to strum opponents. L eading scorer A nnette Smith is gone, but her team m ates are carrying on. W ithout the injured 5-11 center, Texas defeated H ouston, 96-76, and Texas T ech, 83-73, in the Southw est C onference Post-Season C lassic, and w asted D rake, 96-60, Thursday in an NCA A tournam ent first-round gam e. “ A lot o f team s expected us to fall down when I got hurt, but we know b etter,” said Sm ith, the fifth knee- surgery victim for the Longhorns this season. S m ith ’s departure, coupled with senior guard Leta W haley’s return from her ow n knee injury, m ade an already short team shorter. But the Longhorns have made their last three opponents sing the turnover blues, as die defense forced 93 mistakes. lineup effective The m ost in Sm ith’s absence consisted o f 5-6 W haley, 5-7 Audrey Sm ith, 5-5 Kam- ie E thridge, 6-2 Andrea Lloyd and 6-0 Fran H arris. The five played together for ju st 30 o f 120 minutes in the last three contests, yet produced a scoring margin o f 13 points per game. The sm all com bination blitzed D rake, 16-4, midway through the first half to lift T exas from a three-point deficit. T he Longhorns, 31-2, steadily pulled aw ay from the Bulldogs on the field-goal strength o f 69 percent shooting. T exas has shot 59 percent from the field since losing Annette Smith. C oach Jody C onradt said the pres­ sure defense led by K am ie Ethridge, W haley and Audrey Smith creates dam -bursting possibilities. • C o m p u te r seeds T exas second in M idw est, page 12. “ We think w e’re in better condition than any team in the country, and we wait for the other team to get tired ,” Conradt said. “ W hen they do that’s when we really try to turn on the after­ burners.” Harris and Audrey Smith were all- SW C tournam ent selections. Harris scored 48 points, many on shots from the area inside the lane previously oc­ cupied by A nnette Smith. Audrey Sm ith supported Harris with 42 points in the tw o gam es. H am s led a balanced attack against Drake with 21 points. Lloyd scored 19 points as did Sm ith, who has made 77 percent o f her field-goal attempts in the last three gam es. Starting center Cara Priddy scored 16 on eight-of-10 shooting, and Ethridge put in 12. The 36-point win avenged a De­ cem ber loss to D rake, when the Long­ horns had both A nnette Smith and W haley. “ I think every injury this year has brought out the talent o f the p layers,” Conradt said. “ Right now , without Annette and the other players that we lost early, 1 still feel w e’re a better ball team than we were last year going into the p layo ffs.” Entering the NCAA playoffs last season, Texas was 28-2 and ranked No. 3 in the nation. The Longhorns won their first tw o NCAA T ourna­ ment gam es before losing to Louisi­ ana Tech, 72-58, in R uston, La. Texas carries a 26-gam e w inning streak to Ruston this w eekend as M id­ west Regional play continues. Texas faces No. 13 N ortheast L ouisiana, 23- 3, Friday, and could m eet No. 2 L oui­ siana T ech, the top seed in the region­ al, in the regional finals Sunday. Travis Spradiing, Daily Texan Staff UT third baseman David Denny throws to first in Sunday’s double-header. Page 12/The Daily Texan/Monday, March 19,1984 Computer ranking system gives Horns second seed 1984 NCAA Division I Women’s Basketball Championship Bracket members) earlier and was told the in­ jury didn’t really enter into the seed­ ing process," she said. Committee member John Kasser said Texas was not seeded in the top four because o f Smith’s injury and a "schedule not as strong as the other four seeds." Kasser, the wom en’s athletic direc­ tor at the University o f Houston, and eight other university administrators placed No. 2 Louisiana Tech, No. 3 Georgia, No. 4 Old Dominion and No. 5 USC above the Longhorns. A computerized index used by both the men's and wom en’s NCAA selec­ tion committees served as a statistical basis for the seedings. The index accounts for a team’s won-lost percentage and difficulty of schedule. Schedule difficulty is deter­ mined by computing opponents’ won- loss records and opponents’ oppo­ nents’ won-loss records. Percentage points are deducted for games against sm all-college competition. Texas’ 30-2 regular-season record was the nation's best, but the Long­ horns’ schedule was not considered demanding. The computer frowned at the sched­ ules o f T exas’ Southw est Conference opponents. The other eight SWC teams won 63 percent o f their non­ conference games, but many o f the wins came against sm all-college op­ position. Texas played tough non-conference opponents, but its good performance in those games could not make up for the poorly rated SWC schedule. En- tering the NCAA playoffs, Texas had a 10-2 record against NCAA tourna­ ment teams and a 6-1 mark against top 20 teams. The Longhorns could also not com ­ pensate by winning big against weak teams like TCU and Rice. When Texas annihilated Rice by 63 and USC beat Western Collegiate Athletic Association doormat Stanford by 26, USC came out ahead in the eyes o f the selection committee. Stan­ ford gives USC more schedule points than Rice gives Texas, but the Long­ horns get no compensation for the greater scoring margin. Selection committee chairman Nora Lynn Finch said Texas was hurt be­ cause scoring margin is not consid­ ered. “ Texas has little to gain when they play most Southwest Conference team s,” Finch said. T exas’ NCAA tournament record, top 20 record and scoring margin each ranked third when compared to the top four seeds. U SC ’s ranking in each cat­ egory was fifth. When the two teams met Jan. 2, Texas won, 77-68, but the Trojans head the West Regional. “ I’d be less than honest if I said we weren’t a little hurt when we got the draw we got,” Conradt said. The psychology worked in NCAA first-round action Thursday, as Texas trounced Drake, 96-60. In other Mid­ west Regional first-round games, Louisiana Tech routed Texas Tech, 94-68, Northeast Louisiana beat Kan­ sas State, 78-73, and LSU defeated Missouri, 92-82. Georgia Mississippi Tennessee Alabama Old Dominion N.C. State Cheyney North Carolina USC Montana San Diego State Long Beach St. La. Tech LSU NE Louisiana Texas NAUWAERT E uropean-Style T enn is S h o e By STAN ROBERTS Daily Texan Staff The H ouston Post reported M arch 1 1 w hat m any follow ers o f w o m e n 's college basketball assum ed: " T h e L onghorns ... are the top- ranked team in the nation and will be the top seed in the 32-team N C A A T o u rn a m e n t." T hat afternoon the N C A A selection com m ittee surprised the L onghorns by seeding the L onghorns behind four o th er team s. As one o f the top four, the L onghorns w ould have been the top seed in one o f four regionals. Instead, for the second co nsecutive y ear T exas travels to R uston, L a., as the M idw est R egional N o. 2 seed. W hen T exas coach Jody C onradt heard the new s on a local g o lf c o u rse, she said, "1 have to laugh ' M ore perplexed than g o o d -n atu red , C onradt w ondered why T ex as w as not a regional top seed. (N C A A "U n le ss we know exactly w hat they c o m m ittee selection m em bers) con sid er, th e re 's no w ay to k n o w ," she said. " M y biggest c o m ­ plaint is m aybe they c h an g ed the rules after they got into it. “ W e w ere led to believe there w ere certain things they w ould c o n sid er, and then what I keep h earing m akes me think those w e re n 't the things they w ere c o n s id e rin g ," C o n rad t said. C onradt b elie v ed c e n te r A nnette S m ith 's late-season injury w ould not adversely affect her te a m 's seeding. Now she believes the injury did affect her te a m 's seeding. " I inquired (o f N C A A c o m m ittee RESEARCH PAPERS TOLL-FREE HOTLINE 800-621-5745 IN ILLINOIS CALL 312-922-0300 AUTHOR'S RESEARCH, ROOM 600 407 S. Dearborn, Chicago, IL 60605 7 / ' m s 'ate— 24th & San Antonio Open Every Night Until 1:30 Open at 10:30 a.m. 7 days a week Happy Hour Mon.-Fri. 5-7 Snauwaert, the leader in tennis rackets, presents a superior quality shoe. Full grain leather, stitched soles and convenient velcro closing system. Men’s & ladies’ reg. $3495 oo tiOWI Only$26 TH IS WEEK ONLY shop early for best SPORTS size selection s ™ £d level H I v I !'! * If MAJORING IN SIRVICE SINCE 1896 price effective through 3/24/84 SUPER CITY BAND Happy Hour 2-8 pm Daily Drink Specials Enjoy the New Beer Garden w/Horseshoes ^ n o t S o CQNGfll SS VV3 / 9 6 6 ^ Planning summer in Fort Worth? Plan on TCU, too. Check on this chance to get ahead . . . or make up for something you missed. Consider taking a course at TCU this summer that can transfer back to your hom e university next fall. We offer a three- week m ini term , tw o five-week terms, an eight-week evening term. And there's still tim e fo r work and summer fun! For your copy of the TCU Summer Sessions Bulletin, contact the Division of C ontinuin g Education, TCU Box 32927, Fort Worth, TX 76129. Or call us at (817) 921-7130. We're here to help. EDOU TEXAS CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY K U )*)li< íes ap ply e q u a lly w ith o u t regard to re lig io n , sex, hand icap , race or e thn ic o rigin . with special guest Jon Butcher Axis Monday, April 9 at 8 PM $11.50, $10.50. & $9.50 - Tickets on sale now at The Erwin Center, Hasting’s Records & Tapes (Northcross Mall), Ft. Hood (Fiddler’s Green Rec. Center), Sears (Hancock Center & Barton Creek Mall), The Performing Arts Center, Joske’s (Highland Mall) and The Paramount Theatre. NO CAMERAS, produced by Stone City Attractions UTTM CHARGE-A-TICKET: 512/477-6060 606 convenience charge per ticket on all phone orders & at UTTM outlets. THE o f T e x^ s 4 t 4USTir< F04N K E fW N CEN TER „ .T I C K E T S A V A I L A B L E LL U T T M O U T L E T S Students’ Association Presidential Runoff candidates Meet the press Students’ Association 1984 elections ★★★★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A Candidates Rodney Schlosser and Scott Scarborough will meet Daily Texan Editor Roger Campbell Reporter Jimmy Munoz Editorial page editor David Woodruff Noon-1:30 p.m. Monday Texas Union Board of Directors Room Texas Union Building 4.118 Jointly sponsored by the Texas Union Ideas and Interactions Committee and the Students’ Association Think you’re pregnant? Use Predictor In-Home Pregnancy Test. It’s the same as a hospital test. You’re on your own for the first time and life is a lot different now. If you think you might be pregnant, you want to know for sure. This is the time to use Predictor In-Home Pregnancy Test. It’s the exact same test method used in over 2,000 hospitals and 13 million laboratory tests nationwide. So you know Predictor is accurate. Predictor can be used as soon as nine days after you miss your period. It’s convenient and gives you results in just one hour. Think you’re pregnant? Remember, you can use Predictor with confidence, it’s the test method used in over 2,000 American hospitals. Nothing Predicts Pregnancy more accurately. SPORTSWIRE From staff and wire reports Texas falls to UCLA in track dual Einar Vilhjalmsson beat the current world record-hold­ er in the javelin by almost 20 feet to provide one of the bright spots for the Texas men’s track team Saturday as U C L A defeated the Longhorns 91-62 in a dual meet. Defending N C A A champion Vilhjalmsson’s throw of 281-5 outdistanced Tom Petranoff s 261-6. Petranoff, who competed unattached, has the world's best throw at 327-2. In the pole vault, Texas' Doug Jones took first at 16-6 and Mitch Long grabbed second with a 16-0 vault, giving the Longhorns their only one-two finish in the meet. Freshman James Lott won the 110-meter high hurdles with a time of 14.59 and finished second in the high jump with a leap of 7-0. Texas won seven of eighteen events in the meet. Men’s tennis team loses to Houston The Texas men’s tennis team fell to Houston Saturday in a non-conference match, 5-4. to close out its three-day trip to Miami, Fla. The Longhorns won all three doubles matches but lost five of six singles matches. Tom Fontana was the only Texas player to win his singles match. Texas now has a spring dual match record of 11-4. Texas’ next match is against Ohio State at 1 p.m. Tuesday at Penick-AHison Courts. It will play Tennessee at Pen- ick-Allison Wednesday. Golfers finish second at Great Hills The Texas women's golf team finished second in the Betsy Rawls Invitational at Great Hills golf course. March 11. Tulsa finished first with a score of 924, while Texas compiled a 928 team total. Other S W C teams competing were: Texas A & M . in ninth with 952; T C U , in 12th with 961; and S M U , in 16th at 992. Jody Rosenthal of Tulsa was tournament medalist with 221, followed by New Mexico's Theresa Schreck. who shot 228. Sherri Steinhauer was the top golfer for the Longhorns, finishing tied for fourth with 230. Other Tex­ as scores were: Nancy Ledbetter. 232; Kim Shipman. 234; Meredith McCuaig, 235; and Lisa DePaulo, 242. Texas next competes in the S M U Lady Mustang Round-up March 28-30. Rice rally tops UH in SWC baseball H O U ST O N — James Thompson hit a home run and Bobby Eggleston knocked in the winning run with a triple as Rice rallied in the seventh inning to grab a 6-4 South­ west Conference baseball win over the University of Houston. Rice was trailing 4-1 entering the inning. Thompson led off the inning with a homer. The second run was scored on Curtis Fox’s single and the third run of inning was scored on an infield ground out. Eggleston’s triple knocked in what proved to be the winning run. The insurance run came in the eighth inning when Kent Koppa hit his fifth home run of the season. Ed Clark, now 4-3, took the loss for Houston. Rice now stands at 22-2 and 2-1 in S W C play, includ­ ing a split of Saturday’s double header with Houston. The Cougars are now 19-9 and 1-2. NFL leaders to discuss USFL threat H O N O L U L U — Combating the United States Football League and a possible sale of the Dallas Cowboys are issues during the National Football expected to be League’s annual meeting beginning Monday. The U S F L question reportedly has the league in two camps. One, which is said to include commissioner Pete Rozelle, thinks the best way to deal with the problem is to ignore it, and let the U S F L ’s questionable fiscal policy run its course. The other camp wants action, in the form of moving up the college draft from May to February and taking on the U S F L in wallet-to-wallet combat. Other possibilities include raiding U S F L rosters and loosening eligibility rules. Jim Heffeman, the N F L ’s director of public relations, is playing down the issue, saying. “ There hasn’t been any overreaction.” He said the simple fact the league exists is a concern, especially in terms of pushing up salaries, but notes the N F L has survived other competition in the past. The Daly Texan/Monday, March 19,1984/Page 13 Gamblers upset Generals; Michigan gets by Arizona United Press International H O U ST O N — Quarterback Jim Kelly passed for 271 yards, rushed for 65 yards and threw one touchdown to lead the upstart Houston Gamblers to a 32-25 victory over the New Jersey Generals. The Gamblers, 3-1, won their home opener before 35,532 ecstatic Houston fans while the Generals, 3-1, had a three-game winning streak snapped. The Generals struck first with 7:05 left in the first quarter when quarter­ back Brian Sipe passed seven yards to tight end Je ff Spek for a 7-0 lead. The Gamblers countered with an eight-play, 71-yard drive with Sam Harrell scoring from the five yard line. The snap from center to holder Greg Moser on the point after was high. But Moser lateraled to place- kicker Toni Fritsch, who threw a pass to Harrell all alone in the right comer of the end zone for two points. The Generals struck twice in the last eight minutes with Sipe throwing six yards to wide receiver Clarence Collins for a touchdown and Herschel Walker running one yard for a score. M ichigan 31, Arizona 26 PO N T IA C , Mich. — Derek Hollo­ way caught two of quarterback Bobby Hebert’s three thouchdown passes to help keep the Panthers undefeated with a victory over the Wranglers. Novo Bojovic kicked a 47-yard field goal with 3:02 left to put M ichi­ gan, 4-0, out of danger from losing by a field goal. That move proved wise because Ar- USFL izona, 2-2, moved to the Michigan four in the last minute only to have a Greg Landry pass intercepted in the end zone. Landry had completed 12 consecu­ tive passes in the second half and only missed three until David Greenwood leaped up and intercepted an intended pass for wide receiver Trumain John­ son with 57 seconds to play. Hebert moved Michigan to scores the first two times it had the ball, in­ cluding a 10-yard touchdown pass to Holloway that helped the Panthers take a 14-6 halftime lead. P itt. 16, W ashington 7 W A S H IN G T O N — Tony Lee kicked an 18-yard field goal with 1:56 to play and Jeff Delaney returned an interception 50 yards for a touchdown 40 seconds later to give the Maulers a victory over the winless Federáis. Glenn .Carano passed five yards to Greg Anderson for the Maulers’ other touchdown. Reggie Collier passed seven yards to Joey Walters for the Federáis’ points. Carano, who completed 18-of-28 passes for 240 yards, set up the final score with a 62-yard toss to Mike Ro- zier. Rozier had his best day as a pro with 77 yards on 22 carries. He also caught three passes for 87 yards. Ph ila. 28, O akland 7 P H IL A D E L P H IA — Kelvin Bryant gained 173 yards in 24 carries and scored a pair of touchdowns to lead the Stars to a victory over the Invad­ ers. Playing in their home opener before a Veterans Stadium crowd of 30,284, the Stars, 3-1, rebounded from a sluggish start to send the Invaders, 0- 4, to defeat in Oakland’s debut under head coach Chuck Hutchison. Denver 36, Tam pa 30 D E N V E R — Veteran Craig Pen­ rose threw two touchdown passes to lead the Gold to a victory over the Bandits. On Tampa Ba y’s second possession John Reaves caught Denver in a safety blitz, hitting Gary Anderson for 21 yards. Anderson then ran off left tack­ le for 13 more. Reaves passed to Lar­ ry Brodsky for 12 and to Eric Truvil- lion for 13 yards and a touchdown. Zenon Andrusyshyn hit the point af­ ter. Birm . 54, Memphis 6 B IR M IN G H A M , Ala. — Birming­ ham, 3-1, scored on its fourth play from scrimmage and went on to post a U S F L record for points by one team in an easy win over Lewis and the Memphis Showboats Saturday night. Walter Lewis, a favorite of the B ir­ mingham crowd during his days at A l­ abama, had 68 yards passing on six- of-19 attempts for no scores and one interception. THE BEACH llam -2pm D A ILY r Try a Breaded 6 oz. chicken breast sauteed in garlic but­ ter and olive oil served with a side order of fettucini Alfredo or How about a soft chicken taco? Chicken enchiladas verdes? O t a Yucatacan chicken torta? Spinach Mushroom Pie more to your liking? Maybe one of our new made-to- order pasta dishes prepared with garden fresh veggies & a cream sauce? Y O U D O N ’T H A V E T O EA T , you can relax in the shade by our volcanic rock waterfall and pull on one of over 84 foreign & domestic brews, or perhaps Moet Chandon is more your style. Nibble on some smoked oysters. Heart of Palm or Artichoke Hearts from our antipasto plate. Try a few Maui Wowies while you listen to some of the best enter­ tainment in town. Now serving Breakfast Tacos on week­ ends. 2 9 ^ ¡S a i^ ¿ a £ Ín t ¡ ^ ^ ^ ^ B 4 7 4 ^ 0 6 0 £ ^ ' yivicfo ‘V U dttii. MONDAY M ille r — Lite — Low enbrau $2.00 A Pitcher 8-2am Tuesday — Wednesday — Thursday Beat the Heat 60 oz. Pitchers of Everclear M argaritas 4-8pm — $4.50 8 -1 0pm — $5.50 10-2am — $6.50 MON-FRI 4pm-2am 606 M aiden Lane SAT-SUN 6pm-2am 458-5950 No Cover ■HILLEL! H ILLEL= H ILLEL! Did you miss Mardi G ras?~~ well, there's still P U R IM ...!! We re having a Shushan Purim Party, TONIGHT,8 p.m.,at Hillel... - -FOOD,DRINK(I),DANCING- - fcDON'T FORGET YOUR COSTUME! 476-0125 2105 San Antonio Draft Beer Night DRAFT BEER 50» ALL NIGHT Live Tonight: ANIMAL JUSTICE •25C Draft Beer 7-9 Every Night • Rock Videos On 10' Screen • 14 Pool Tables •Over 12.000 Sq. Feet NO COVER A neat appearance is required. THE NEW < RGD M U SIC - G A M E S 2015 E Riverside Drive iSS? 30-50% OFF ^ SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE ON MEN'S & WOMEN'S ACTIVE SPORTSWEAR S'}m N'« E IS P,pf i/N f ... o\N ° S O * rv. c O / , P£KTyO f STUBBIES y \ 0 » / 4 DOBIE MALL e L O W E R L E V E L HO URS: 10 -7 O n e H o u r Free Parking In D ob ie G arag e 477“2652 GRAND OPENING Thursday, March 22 Friday, March 23 Saturday, March 24 PAMELA STANLEY in concert THELMA HOUSTON in concert DANCC to the sounds of JIMMY SPALDING (after hours) Sunday, March 25 SHOWTIM6 11pm Monday & Tuesday Closed for Hangovers UJednesday, March 28 SHOUJTIMC with Tiffany Jones, Hot Chocolate, Tasha Kohl, & Donna Day w i t h s p e c i a l g u e s t M ic h a e l S ch e n k e r G ro u p Friday, M a rch 30 at 8 PM * $ l t 50, $ 1 0 5 0 T i c k e t s o n s o l e n o w a t T h e E r w i n C e n t e r , H a s t m g ' s R e c o r d s & T a p e s i N o r t h c r o s s M a l l ) , & Ft H o o d ( F i d d l e r ' s G r e e n R e c C e n t e r ; S e a r s ( H a n c o c k C e n t e r & B a r t o n C r e e k M a l l I T h e P e r f or m m q A r t s C e n t e r J o s k e ' s ( H i g h l a n d M a i l t S W T S L J S t r a h a n C o h s e u m ( S a n M a r c o s ' T h e P a r a m o u n t T h e a t r e N O C A M E R A S I— Austin's Newest G ay flar 705 Red River 478-6806 TICKETS A V A I L A B L E TIT1 AT ALL U T T M OUTLE TS THE Of TfX4S 41 4US1I* ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ F 0 4 M K e n ^ » s c e r n e o Bright expected to buy Cowboys United Press International DALLAS — Dallas Cowboys pres­ ident and general manager Tex Schramm is expected to propose to NFL owners Monday the sale o f the franchise to a group headed by local businessman H.R. “ Bum” Bright. The Dallas Morning N ew s reported Sunday that Bright’s name will be submitted to league owners at their annual meeting in Honolulu. Bright, 63, chairman o f the board of regents at Texas A&M University and a key factor in that school’s hiring o f Jackie Sherrill as its football coach, flew to Hawaii Saturday with Schramm. A vote on the C ow boys’ sale could come as early as Monday afternoon. The price for the Cowboys will at least double and could come close to tripling the publicized cost o f the most recent NFL franchise sale — that of the D enver Broncos. The Broncos w ere sold for an NFL record $30 million in 1980. The C ow ­ boys’ price, which includes a huge training com plex under office and construction near the D allas-Fort W orth Regional A irport, is expected to exceed $80 m illion. That figure, the Morning N ew s re­ includes B right’s pur­ ported, also chase of the rem ainder o f the 65-year lease on Texas Stadium . Bright, who has gas and oil hold­ ings, reportedly is prepared to put up about 15 percent o f the money for the sale, with the rem ainder com ing from a large group o f area businessm en. Schramm is part o f that group. Current NFL rules stipulate that one purchaser must control 51 percent o f the club, but that rule can be waived. Schramm expects it to be w aived in this case because Schram m — under terms o f the sale — would be given power to act on the C ow boys’ behalf in any league business. Schram m has had that arrangem ent with the team ’s ow ner and founder, Clint M urchison. M urchison told Schram m last sum ­ mer that he w anted to sell the team to settle the estate o f his late brother, who ow ned 35 percent of the team. M urchison, who paid $500.000 to the NFL for the expansion team in 1960, has been in poor health, and his family has expressed no desire to re­ tain the franchise. Three groups have been wooing last Murchison and Schramm since autumn. The most visible o f the groups was headed by local businessm en Vance Miller and W .O . Bankston. M iller and Bankston accom panied Schram m to the Super Bowl in Tam pa, F la., in January, increasing speculation at the time that a deal was near. Land developer George Barber from Boca R aton, Fla., also m ade a bid to buy the club, apparently offer­ ing more money than either of the other two groups. But M urchison told Barber he pre­ ferred local ow nership. Schram m 's top priority in selecting a new ow ner was to find one who would not meddle with the clu b 's suc­ cessful hierarchy, but Bright has a re­ cent history of being in the spotlight. Baseball/ iContinued from page 11 rising, it was Ford. Last year, Ford threw a pitch that former Texas catcher Jeff Hearron shot right back into Ford’s face. The line drive broke Ford’s jaw , four of his teeth and chipped a bit o f bone off his nose, but Ford threw out Hearron at first and completed the game, blood flying from his mouth on every pitch. A week later Ford was pitching with his jaw wired shut. He had wire clippers in his back pocket in case he became sick. Doughty touched Ford with a ho­ mer in the first game and came within a few feet o f doing it again. His dou­ ble tied the score, and Richards, who had the game-winning hit in the first game, chopped a single to right for the final margin. “ I couldn’t believe they brought him in, but I loved it,” Doughty said. ” 1 felt kind o f sorTy for him , having to throw that much. I could really see the ball good when he p itch ed .” The Rams were seeing L abay’s pitches alm ost as w ell. Foyt and Troy Dodd smashed consecutive home runs in the fourth inning o f S unday’s first game to give the Ram s a 2-1 lead. The lead was lost in the fifth when Doughty hom ered and Richards drove in a run with a groundout. Texas add­ ed three in the sixth with five singles and a walk. “ I didn’t throw good a g ain ,” said a disgusted Labay, who has given up seven home runs. Fourteen of eight­ een runs Labay has allowed have come on home runs. “ I’m just getting my fastball u p ,” Labay said. “ It seems like every team I pitch against has one good hitter, and I m anage to throw that hitter a bad pitch. My fastball must be a perfect pitch for hitters to hit o u t.” Sw indell’s pitches were alm ost per­ fect, though certainly not to the Ram hitters. Only a third-inning walk to Kuchta spoiled his perfect game — a walk which came with a full count on the hitter. “ That w as a very close p itch ,” Swindell said. Catcher Darren Loy said he believed Kuchta swung at the pitch, though at the time the walk didn’t seem extrem ely important. “ He checked his sw in g ,” Loy said “ I thought he went around on i t " Texas coach C liff G ustafson came close to breaking perhaps baseball's most sacred com m andm ent — thou shall not speak to, look at or breathe on a pitcher in the midst o f a no-hitter “ After the sixth inning Coach told me the second batter coming up (Foyt) was a good hitter, and that I could pitch around him if 1 w anted,” Sw in­ dell said. “ I think he knew my fast­ ball was leaving me a little b it.” Gustafson proved correct, for Foyt hit a liner straight at the wall in center field. and (D avid) “ (D ennis) C ook plenty of Wrzesinski kept saying room, plenty o f room ’ and then wham! I hit the w all,” W estbrooks said. “ 1 felt like saying, 'G ee thanks, gu ys.’ I was either going to catch it or run headfirst into the w a l l " Texas faces Southeastern O klaho­ ma State in a 5 p.m . double-header Monday at Disch-Falk Field. G ustaf­ son will start Daniel Pena and either Cook or Ruffin. Fultz will be long gone by then. And that suits him just fine. “ One of these days I ’m going to pull a W atergate,” Fultz said. " I ’m going to sneak into the locker room and bug it so I can find out how C liff wins so many games. It’s going to be the biggest white-collar rip-off ev e r.” HARD CONTACT WEARERS If you w ear regular hard contact lenses your eyes may be exhibiting signs of oxygen deprivation. These may include: 1. "Smolcy," "Misty," or "Cloudy" vision after several hours of wear. 2. Inability to see clearly with spectacles after lens removed. 3. Increasing redness, irritation, or discomfort. HARD OXYGEN PERMEABLE LENSES* ARE AVAILABLE THAT REDUCE THE ABOVE SYMPTOMS, ALLOWING LONGER WEARING TIME, IN­ CREASED COMFORT, AND HEALTHIER EYES. (eyecare) CALL 476-1000 Improve your love life Page 14/The Daly Texüt/Monday, March 19,1964 TEETH EXTRACTIONS If you need removal of several teeth, you may qualify to participate in a pain medication survey. Financial incentive provided for your opinion. For more informa* tion please call: 453-7619 M-F 8 to 5 Biomedical Research Group Inc. Donald R. Mehlisch M.D. O.D.S. * * ♦ ♦ * ♦ * * * ♦ * * * * ♦ K U U -R M ÁUSHN ♦ MUSIC ♦ FESTIVAL I CELEBRATE APRIL 13 -1 4 -1 5 AUDITORIUM SHORES FESTIVAL SCHEDULE SATURDAY, (CONT.) Lisa Gilkyson Asleep at the Wheel SUNDAY (CONT.) Tomas Ramirez FRIDAY, APRIL 13TH Beto y Los Fairlanes Joe King" Carrasco and the Crowns The LeRoi Brothers Little Joe y Johnny y LaFamilia SATURDAY, APRIL 14TH The Lotions Marcia Ball Band Ernie Sky and the K-Tels Jesse Sublett's Secret Six with Johnny Gimble Gary P. Nunn Jerry Jeff Walker SUNDAY, APRIL 15TH Paul Ostermayer and Sorcery Gene Ramey Sextet with Tina Marsh UT Jazz Orchestra Richard Lawn, Director Jazzmanian Devil Bob Meyer Concept Orchestra Robert Shaw W.C. Clark Blues Band Townes Van Zandt Blues Band Angela Strehli Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble Festival Fool- -Turk Pipkin 3 DAYS * 5 CONCERTS * 25 ARTISTS«$15.00* Tickets available fr o m - Inner Sanctum Waterloo Records Yesterday’s Records 504 W. 24th 221 -A S. Lamar 5300 N. Lamar Or send a stamped self-addressed envelope, check or money order to: Cele- Box 5802, Austin, TX 78763. Call 512/ brate Austin Music Festival, P.O. 479-6526 for more information. 'Advance Ticket No Refunds • No Exchanges Slice and Soda only 1.65 All you have to do is bring this coupon by Conans any w eekday betw een 1 1 a —2p. Offer expires M ay 25, 1984. Good a t a ll locations. fO O T M H lZXA Chicago S ty le \ Deep Pan OUR QUALITY . . . OUTSTANDING. OUR PRICE . . . INEXPENSIVE. R u ssell K orm an is the lo w est-p riced , high qu ality je w e le r in tow n. Ruby/Diamond #1 SI 50.00 Emerald/Diamond #1 $195.00 All Diamond #1 $250.00 I4kt Gold 5mm $9.00 6mm $12.00 7mm $14.00 8mm $20.00 Sm. $14.00 Med. $18.00 Lg. $22.50 L apis & 14kt G old ■ H earts ■ Single $11.75 Double $22.50 Triple $32.75 313 South Congress Open Mon-Sat 19-4 441-924* Next to Perry Row Flrtrtoae/srroM troao the Nlghthawk en S. C e n g r ts. The aw ard winning documentary. BATTLE ] H O F HILE ■ m o n . 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Free Sample Offer lust fill in this coupon and mail to FAMILY PLANNING OFFER, PO Box 965, Delran, New lersey 08075 and we will send you, in an unmarked mailer a package of three Semicid Vaginal Con­ traceptive Suppositories, A Guide to Family Planning Booklet, and a 50c store cou­ pon good on your next purchase Semicid 10 s or 20 s Allow 4 to 6 weeks for delivery Offer good only taxed Free Sample offer of Semicid 3's lim ited to in U S A and void where prohibited by law or one order per household and expires 12/31/84 Method Brand CNO 1 «4 Ttw M y Tran/Monday, March 19,1964/Paga 15 8 3-4 11. Meents 1-5 1-2 3, Schafer 1-1 1-1 3. Klusen- dorf 0 0 2-2 2. Woodward OO OO 0. Wysinger OO 0 0 0 Totals 24-54 16-2264 Halftime — Illinois 24. Villanova 20 Total fouls — Vilianova 22, Illinois 19 Fouled out — Pressley. Mont­ gomery Rebounds — Villanova 34 (Pinckney 14). Illi­ nois 37 (Winters 14) Assists — Villanova 15 (Dobbs 4), Illinois 14 (Doulgas 8) A — 10.788 Springfield. Mass March 23 & 24 March 26 at New York Chai March 28 at New York Notre Dame (18-11) vs Boston College (18-11) at Sunday's hostels Denver 107. Chicago 104 Seattle 126. Golden State 99 Kansas City 108. Cleveland 97 Milwaukee 109, Washington 101 San Antonio at San Dieqo Detroit at Utah, 8 30 p m CST Monday’s Gama NHL SPORTSRECORD U S F i NCAA By United Prom International Eaetem Conteranca Atlantic OlvWon New Jersey Philadelphia Pittsburgh Washington Tampa Bay New Orleans Birmingham Jacksonville Memphis Michigan Oklahoma Houston Chicago San Antonio Denver Arizona Los Angeles Oakland 95 24 55 70 52 121 W L T Pet. PF PA 750 82 750 39 71 250 000 123 87 76 61 34 98 63 750 111 333 104 250 3 1 0 3 1 0 1 3 0 0 4 0 Southam OlvWon 1 0 750 0 0 1 000 1 0 2 0 3 0 3 3 3 1 1 Western Conteranca Central OlvWon 4 3 3 0 0 0 0 1 000 106 1 0 750 52 1 0 750 129 000 4 0 81 000 4 0 36 Pacific Division 1 0 2 0 2 0 4 0 750 80 500 115 47 500 14 000 3 2 2 0 68 41 88 105 75 82 67 60 86 Saturday s Results Los Angeles 13 San Antonio 12 Oklahoma 17 Chicago 14 Birmingham 54 Memphis 6 Sunday’s Resuda Denver 36 Tampa Bay 30 Houston 32 New Jersey 25 Pittsburgh 16 Washington 7 Philadelphia 28 Oakland 7 Michigan 31 Arizona 26 Monday's Gama (AITbnasCST) New Orleans at Jacksonville 7 p m Saturday, Mar. 24 Oakland at San Antonio 2 p m Phi adeiphia at Pittsburgh. 3 p m Oklahoma at Arizona 8 p m Sunday, Mar 25 Denver at Memphis 1 30 p m Chicago at New Oneans 1 30 p m Washington at New Jersey 1 30 p m Jacksonvi! e at Los Angeles 3 p m Monday. Mar. 26 Birmingham at Tampa Bay 7 p m Michigan at Houston 8 p m VfflGMA COMMONWEALTH (63) Brown 5-5 0-0 10, Franco 2-5 0-0 4, Schlegel 6-15 4- 5 16 Duncan 6-15 2-4 14. Jones 2-6 1-2 5 Lamb 3-7 0- 0 6. Allen 1-3 0-0 2 Davis 0-1 0-0 0. Dickerson 2-7 2-2 6 Wake 0-0 0-0 0 Totals 27-64 9-13 63 SYRACUSE (78) Addison 9-13 6-6 24. Kerins 6-14 4-4 16, Hawkins 4- 7 6-8 14 Washington 5-9 8-10 18, Waldron 0-0 2-3 2. Monroe 0-2 2-2 2. Spera 0-1 2-2 2. Triche 0-0 0-0 0, Papadakos 0-0 0-0 0. Karpis 0-0 0-0 0. Alexis 0-10-10 Totals 24-47 30-36 78 Halftime — Syracuse 37 Virginia Commonwealth 36 Fouled out — Brown Total fouls — Virginia Com­ monwealth 28 Syracuse 12 Rebounds — Virginia Commonwealth 32 (Schlegel 14), Syracuse 36 (Addi­ son 9) Assists — Virginia Commonwealth 17 (Duncan. Lamb 6 each), Syracuse 15 (Washington Monroe 4) Technical — None LOUISVILLE (69) Forrest 1 -4 4-5 6 Thompson 2-3 2-2 6 Jones 6-7 3-7 15 Gordon 4-12 9-10 17. Wagner 6-12 3-5 15 Hall 2-4 2-2 6 McSwam 2-2 0-0 4 Sumpter 0-1 0-0 0 Jeter 0-0 0-0 0 Totals 23-45 23-31 69 TULSA (67) Johnson 0-5 4-8 4 Williams 0-0 0-0 0 Fobbs 0-1 1-2 1 Harris 9-20 3-5 21 Ross 11-21 6-9 28 Shepherd 0-1 0-0 0 Moss 1-8 3-3 5 McKinney 3-4 0-0 6 Suggs 1-2 0-0 2 Boudreaux 0-0 0-0 0 Vanley 0-10-0 0 Totals 25- 63 17-27 67 Halftime — Louisville 41 Tulsa 28 Total fouls — Louisville 22 Tulsa 26 Fouled out — Gordon Re­ - Louisville 38 (Jones 11) Tulsa 31 (Johnson bounds 10) Assists - Louisville 14 (Gordon 4) Tulsa 8 (John­ son 3) A — 10 788 LUNOIS STATE (61) Stefanovic 2-8 0-0 4 H Cornley 2-11 2-2 6 Zwart 3-9 3-4 9 McKenney 5-9 0-0 10 Johnson 5-8 4-6 14 Dun­ can 5-11 0-0 10 Sanders 2-4 0-0 4, Braksick 2-3 0-0 4 E Cornley 0-1 0-0 0 Anderson 0-0 0-0 0 Totals 26-64 9-1261 DEPAUL (75) Corbin 6-9 8 8 20 Holmes 3-7 1-2 7 Embry 3-4 3-4 9 Patterson 6-9 2 6 14 McMillan 1-3 1-3 3, Jackson 3- 9 2 2 8 Comegys 5-10 4-5 14 McCoy 0-0 0-1 0 Lamp- ley 0-0 0-0 0 West 0-0 0-0 0 Lattner 0-0 0-0 0 Totals 27-51 21-31 75 Halftime DePaui 37 Illinois State 28 Fouled out — None Total fouls — Illinois State 24. DePaui 17 Re­ bounds — Illinois State 31 (Zwart, H Cornley 6). DePaui 37 (Corbm 9) Assists — Illinois State 11 (Duncan 3) DePaui 16 (McMillan 5) Technical foul — None VMQMA(S3) Miller 4-5 1-2 9. Edelin 4-4 0-0 8. Pofynice 2-4 1-2 5. Wilson 6-14 1-2 13. Carlisle 6-10 0-0 12 Stokes 2-4 0-0 4. Sheehey 1-10-0 2, Mernfield 0-0 0-0 0 Totals 25-42 3-6 53 ARKANSAS (51) Valentine 3-7 2-2 8, Sutton 0-2 3-4 3. Kletne 6-10 3-4 15. Norton 5-10 1-2 11. Robertson 6-12 2-4 14, Rose 0- 10-0 0, Ratliff 0-0 0-0 0. Bedford 0 -0 0 -0 0 Totals 20-42 11-1651 Halftime — Virginia 21, Arkansas 21 After regulation — 49 all Fouled out — None Total fouls — Virginia 15. Arkansas 14 Rebounds — Virginia 21 (Edelin. Carlisle 6 each). Arkansas 22 (Kleine 7). Assists — Virginia 13 (Carlisle 7). Arkansas 12 (Robertson 7) Technical fouls — None SOUTHERN MEHTOUST (36) Davis 5-10 2-2 12. Lewis 1-4 0 0 2, Koncak 6-11 1-1 13. Moore O l 0 0 0 . Wright 4-13 1-3 9. GadisOOOOO. Fuller 0 1 0 0 0, Anderson 0 1 0 0 0 Pink 0-1 OO 0. Johnson OO OO 0 Totals 16-42 4-6 36 GEORGETOWN (37) Dalton 0 0 0 0 0, Wingate 3-8 0 1 6. Ewing 5-7 0 2 10. Brown OOOOO, Jackson 3-11 1-2 7. Smith OO 0 1 0, Martin 1-2 OO 2. Broadnax 0 1 0 0 0, Williams 3-7 O 0 6 Graham 2-3 2-3 6 Totals 17-39 3-9 37 Halftime — Southern Methodist 24. Georgetown 16 Total fouls — SMU 15. Georgetown 14 Fouled out — SMU Anderson Rebounds — SMU 31 (Davis and Wright 9). Georgetown 24 (Graham 8) Assists — SMU 7 (Wright 5). Georgetown 11 (Smith and Broadnax 3) KANSAS (56) Knight 6-14 OO 12. Thompson 5-81-211, Dreiling 5- 7 0 0 10, Turgeon OO OO 0 Henry 5-11 OO 10, Kellogg 4-8 OO 8. Martin 2-3 OO 4, Banks 2-2 0 0 4. Boyle O l 0 0 0 Totals 29-54 1-2 59 WAKE FOREST (66) Toms 0-1 OO 0 Green 1016 0 1 20, Teachey 4-8 5-7 13, Rudd 2-10 2-2 6. Young 4-10 0 0 8, Garber 5-6 3-5 13 Cline 3-6 3-4 9, Bogues 0-1 O O 0 Kepley OOOOO Totals 28-58 13-19 69 Halftime — Kansas 32. Wake Forest 31 Fouled out — None Total fouls — Kansas 17, Wake Forest 7 Re­ bounds — Kansas 27 (Knight 8). Wake Forest 34 (Teachey 15) Assists — Kansas 23 (Turgeon 9), Wake Forest 18 (Teachey 4) Techincal foul — None A — 13.440 WASHMQTON (60) Schrempf 11-14 8-12 30. Fortier 4-6 5-5 13. Welp 3-3 2-2 8. Vaughn 2-7 1-3 5. Williams 7-9 OO 14. Damon O OOOO. Koehler OOOOO. Kuyper OOOOO, Rogers 4-5 2-5 10 Totals 31-44 18-2780 DUKE (76) Meagher 2-2 0-0 4. Alarie 7-11 6-7 20. Bilas 2-3 6-6 10. Dawkins 6-11 10-13 22. Amaker 3-8 2-28, McNeely 0-1 OO 0, Henderson 6-10 2-4 14. Anderson OO OO 0 Totals 26-46 26-34 78 Halftime — Duke 43. Washington 35 Total fouls — Washington 26 Duke 27 Fouled out — Fortier, Bilas Rebounds — Washington 21 (Welp 5). Duke 26 (Alarie 7) Assists — Washington 18 (Vaughn 12). Duke 19 (Amaker 9) Technicals — None A — 10.504 tSTFaMips By w n w o n w s n w i M p n i Opening round P JL_ 1 1 ' B__ aa Notre Dame 67. Old Dominion 62 Tennessee 54. St Peter s 40 Southwest Louisiana 94. Utah St 92 Tenn -Chattanooga 74, Georgia 69 (OT) So Alabama 88. Florida 87 Lamar 64. New Mexico 61 Thursday, March 18 Florida St 74, No Carolina St 71 (OT) Marquette 73. Iowa St 53 Nebraska 56. Creighton 54 Michigan 94. Wichita St. 70 Virginia Tech 77, Georgia Tech 74 Xavier (Ohio) 60. Ohio St 57 (OT) Santa Clara 66. Oregon 53 Friday. March 16 Weber St 75, Fordham 63 Boston College 76. St Joseph s 63 Pittsburgh 95. La Salle 91 Second round 116 , N.C. VILAN0VA(S6) McClain 6-12 3-4 15. Pressley 4-13 1-2 9, Pinckney 7-13 1 0 1 3 24. Dobbs 1-7 OO 2. McLain 0-3 OO 0 Wilbur 3-5 OO 6. Jensen 0 2 0 0 0. Everson 0 0 OO 0 Totals 21-55 14-1956 LUNOIS (64) Altenberger 6-9 0-1 12. Winters 5-9 2-2 12, Mont­ gomery 4-10 0 2 8 Douglas 3-12 7-8 13. Richardson 4- Pittsburgh 66. Florida State 63 Virginia Tech 68. South Alabama 66 March 16 Tenn -Chattanooga (24-6) at Tennessee (20-13) Santa Clara (23-8) at Lamar (24-6) Weber St (23-8) at SW Louisiana (21 -8) Nebraska (18-11) at Xavier (Ohio) (219) Marquette (17-12) at Michigan (19-10) NATIONAL BASKETBALL A860C. My Unhod -Vaas IntemoSonaf (Wast Coast Gama Not Inducted) Eastern 3c * anca Atente OMNon W L Pet. 0 8 16 51 42 25 41 25 37 30 30 36 40 29 38 29 33 37 25 41 23 43 . 19 48 761 — 627 9 621 9V* 552 14 441 21V* 580 — 1 567 471 7V* 379 13 Vi 348 15’/* 333 20 W L Pet. GB 38 31 32 32 35 32 37 28 40 26 41 551 — 529 477 464 412 388 11 IV* 5 6 9'/* 22 40 28 589 35 33 32 37 30 38 25 42 667 — 5 515 10 464 13 V* 441 373 19'/* 15 * x-Boston Philadelphia New York New Jersey Washington . . Milwaukee Detroit Atlanta Chicago Cleveland Indiana Utah Dallas Kansas City Denver San Antonio Houston Central OlvWon Western Contorenoo Mdweet DMNon .............................36 FaeMe OMNon .............................44 Los Angeles Portland Seattle Phoenix Golden State San Diego HKWHCnWO Pteoff bwvfh galurdays Reátete New York 123. Kansas City 109 Philadelphia 112. Phoenix 131 Boston 103. Atlanta 88 New Jersey 100, Indiana 96 Los Angeles 123. Houston 111 Utah 118. Dallas 103 Portland 133. Golden State 96 NATIONAL^HOCKEY LEAGUE By Unted Prwws Ntemwttond Waiaa iterance FaMckOtuWon x-NY Islanders x-Washington x-Phiiadefphia x-NY Rangers New Jersey Pittsburgh x-Buftalo x Boston x-Quebec Montreal Hartford x-Minnesota St Louis Detroit Chicago Toronto W L T Fla. GF GA 328 255 92 282 216 91 311 267 86 286 278 85 41 311 221 236 353 36 2 45 26 43 26 5 38 25 10 36 26 9 7 17 48 6 15 52 Adama OMBton 7 45 22 43 25 5 39 26 9 5 34 34 9 25 38 97 91 87 73 59 296 240 307 243 336 259 275 268 263 293 * ■ Campbsi Contaranaa Norris DMrton S r 37 29 8 30 38 7 28 39 7 26 39 8 9 24 41 Smyths OMNon r i Fla. OF GA 324 316 269 300 270 297 285 251 364 281 82 67 63 60 57 y-Edmonton x-Calgary x-Winnipeg x-Vancouver Los Angeles 425 296 282 282 341 321 287 311 287 357 (Top tour h each dMNen quaMy tor Stenlay Cup 53 17 5 111 77 32 28 13 68 29 33 10 67 7 30 38 54 21 42 12 pteyolte.) M É tchid ptoyoR berth cKWon tala Calgary 4. Win peg 3 Hartford 5, N Y. Islanders 4 St Louis 5. Washington 3 Edmonton 4. Buffalo 3 Quebec 5. Minnesota 5 Sunday’s HaauSa Monday’s Gsmss (ARTbnssCST) Chicago at Montreal. 6 35 p m Philadelphia at New Jersey. 6 35 p m BU Y, SELL, RENT, TRADE... W ANT AD S... 4 7 1-5 24 4 FASHION COORDINATOR FOR T h e D a i l y T e x a n The Texan needs a fashion coordi­ n ato r for the 1984-85 issues of MONTAGE ad v ertisin g fashion su p p lem en t1 to be published Octo­ ber 10 1984 and M arch 6. 1985 A pplicants should be g ra d u a te s tu ­ dents or experienced, know ledge­ able u n d e rg ra d u a te s' w ith some experience and tra in in g in fashion a d v e r tis in g L a y o u t and an d graphics a re desirable C reativity a definite asset Ability to work w ith supplem ent editor and ad v ertisers a m ust Successful applicant m ust be available from A ugust 1 through O ctober 10 and J a n u a ry 8 through M arch 6 E sti­ m ated hours required. 200 S ti­ pend. $400 per sem ester payable upon publication i a b ility See Sherry Hathaway Texan Advertising Department T S P B u ild in g 3 -2 1 0 8am to 5pm . M on d ay th ro u g h F rid a y to m a k e a p p lic a tio n To Help With Difficult Subjects: THE PROBLEM SOLVERS ALGEBRA & TRIGONOMETRY AUTOMATIC CONTROL SYSTEMS BIOLOGY BUSINESS, MANAGEMENT & FINANCE CALCULUS ADVANCED CALCULUS ECONOMICS ELECTRIC CIRCUITS GEOMETRY LINEAR ALGEBRA MECHANICS OPTICS PHYSICS PSYCHOLOGY STATISTICS CHEMISTRY ORGANIC CHEMISTRY PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY COMPUTER SCIENCE DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS STRENGTH OF MATERIALS & MECHANICS OF SOLIDS TECHNICAL DESIGN GRAPHICS ELECTRONICS f * ... v V / A i EACH BOOK: • Designed to save students hours of time in finding solutions to problems. • Includes every type of problems that might be assigned or given on exams. • Every problem worked out in step-by-step detail. • Problems are arranged in order of complexity, from elementary to advanced. • As essential supplement to any class text. • Over 1,000 pages. • Fully indexed for locating specific problems rapidly. V 4 CALCULUS PtOM IM SOLVE» THE PHYSICS | * * SOLVER TM CHEMISTRY ANNUM SOLVER TM ALGINA MKMLiM SOLVER TM GEOMETRY ANNUM SOEVER 2323 San A ntonio 1st Floor Castilian 478-9833 2 0 1 1 A E ast R iverside and R ivertow ne Mall 444-4703 Each book is the first of its kind ever produced in its field. It is the product of a m assive effort to illu stra te alm ost any im aginable problem in exceptional depth, detail, and clarity. S i SELL IT! BE SURE TO VOTE! s e c t i o n s TSP and CO-OP ELECTION MARCH 28,1984 8:45 am - 4 p.m. TURN UNUSED ITEMS INTO CASH FOR ONLY... with a Classified Ad in The Da iiy Texan USE THIS COUPON TODAY AND SAVE OVER $5! (Expires Fri. M ar. 30, 1984) 1 5 W ords 5 Days S 3 * Days Limited to items under S500 for sale ONLY. Price of item must appear in ad. Payment may be Nam© . . . « • • • • • • • ............................ . . . . . . . made by cosh check or A d d r e s s ............................................................................ p h o n e ....................... credit card only. (Additional words, 4c per day per word) C i t y .............................................State.. . .Zip.................. 5 p la c e c r e d it c a r d ■ ADS BY PHONE AT 471-5244 | Cash Enclosed Accf # MasterCard 1 V>SA I Exp. Date: Signature Classified Ads P.O. BoxD Austin, TX 78712 or bring to Texan Want-Ad Counter, 25th A Whitis I I I I I — TSP — TSP BOARDJOU/ADV Place 1 EbabethGlenewinkel DALY TEXAN EDITOR David Woodruff TSP BOARD-AT LARGE Place 2 Mchele Waaher David Anderson Morris Landau Chris Luna Alese WKams TSPB0ARDJ0U/ADVPtace3 JeffSiptak Diane Tobias TSPB0ARD-J0U/ADVPIace4 Jamie Turner — CO-OP BOARD — PLACE 1 NawUhh-Engineering Chris Girardot-Uberal Arts PLACE2 Corey Peterson-Natural Sciences Ann Ritter-Natural Sciences POLLING PLACES 24th & Speedway (front of Taylor) M l S Al j| i M (front of Union) Main KM AA ^L M J - k ( f r o m o r m m \ n o g . ; Gregory Gym Communication Comp ix Law School (out palio) CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING C0NP0S FOR SAU 471 -5244/8 q.m .-4:30 p.m. M o n d a y -F rid a y /T S P B u ild in g 3.200/2500 W hitis Ave. FOR SALE FOR SALE M o to rcycles for Sole 1 9 8 2 H O N D A P o s ip o r t m o p e d , olm o»! new , 2 0 0 0 miles, o n g in a l o w n e r $ 3 5 0 . 3-19 D o v id 8 3 5 - 9 8 6 9 evening». FOR SALE A u to s for Sole PERFECT C A M P U S cor, 1981 Plymouth C h o m p , A M / F M cassette, 4 sp eed, g re a t FOR SALE B icycles fo r Sale K N I L L I N G V IO L A 15" Excellent cond . tion, $ 5 0 0 n e g o tia b le A ll d a y w e e k e n d s - M o n - F n after 6 :0 0 , 4 7 5 -1 9 4 9 U N I V E G A 10 sp e e d M e n s 2 4 " fram e, n e w tires a n d so d d le G o o d con d itio n T A R R Y T O W N 1BR, 1 BA c o n d o in b e a u ti­ ful n e ig h b o r h o o d A s s u m a b le m o r t g a g e CONDOS F0» SALI M u sical for Sale $ 4 7 ,0 0 0 . 4 5 2 - 8 3 3 7 _______________ 3 - 3 0 FOR SALE 3 - 2 3 D O T M A T R IX p rin te r 1 2 0 C P S C IT O H # 8 5 1 0 Ten m o n t h s o ld E x c e lle n t c o n d i­ 3 -1 9 tion $ 2 9 5 , best o ffe r 4 5 8 - 4 5 0 1 Misc. for S o le____ 15 word minimum Eoch word 1 lima Eoch won) 3 tm « KgyJjl S y i l CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING I Con—cuE v Pay Eon» | M W B K 8 8 B 8 B 8 .$ .24 $ 52 .$ 64 $1.04 $6.60 $6.60 Eoch word 5 timo» [NT- d '7 .7 7 ; Eoch word 10 tuno» 1 col * 1 inch 1 taño 1 col- « 1 inch 2-9 tim aH BBBSH Bp $6.00 1 col. > 1 inch 2 5 o r m o r * tfoso». H $ 1 .0 0 c h o r g o to c h o n g o c o p y . Firot t w o w o rd » m o y b o a * c a p ita l tot 2 5 c fo r o o c h o d d M io n a l w o r d in c o p ita i lottorv M o p o r c o r d a n d V o o 20% DISCOUNT on a l daaiffod odwortomg plocod in ponon and propaid (cap» or chock only — no crodh cord»). TSP Budding, Room 3.200 2500W hita M onday through Friday 8om-4 30pm DEADLINE SCHEDULE M onday Toxon.......... Friday 11am Tppidoy Toxon . . . M onday 11am W odnotdoy Toxon . Tuooday Horn ThundayToxan .W odnotdoy llom Friday Toxon . . . . Thunday 11am lor odfuBtmsoti should bo modo oof krtor thou 30 doyi p r o p o y m oo t n o n -ro - CONDOS FOR SALE TRAVIS GREÉÑ CONDOS Best value in Austin. First stop on UT shuttle south of river. Priced from low $4(rs. 75 units on 5Vi acres. RE/MAX CAPITOL REALTORS Solas Office 444-1110 or 451-2242 CONDOS Efficiency, 1 and 2BR condominiums conveniently located to UT or down­ town Austin. Starting at: $39,000. A s­ sumable, non-qualified loan» avail­ able & below market financing. Great investment. O M N I ENTERPRISES, I N C 451-8577 O N E O F a kind, w o rt c a m p u » co n d o , O v o r io o k C on d om in iu m » , ip a c io u » 2 B R 2 B A , fo rg o brick firopio co, c o ilin g fon», rm crow avo, di»hwo»hor, w o sh o r/d ry o r, b ooutd ul w o o d d o c k in g w ith h o a t o d p o o l a n d »pa, lo v o ly viow , q uiot n o ig h b o r - h o o d , w a lk cam pu», $ 1 0 6 ,5 0 0 . D o n 't m ó» thi» g r o a t o p p o rtu - nity. C o l lo n n ifo r 4 7 9 - 0 2 5 2 _______ 3 - 2 0 ihuttto o r to O R A N G E T R EE c o n d o roody for o c c u ­ p an c y . 1-1 p h o study, firopio co, forgo»! 1 Dodroom B o o rp fo n G o r a g o poriuna. P o t­ io n G fo d o 4 5 9 - 5 5 4 8 . M o r io n o Gfodo, R o o lto r 4 5 9 - 9 4 6 7 __________________ ^ 6 4 B L O C K S fro m UT, 1-1; p riv a to p a rk in g, lo c u n ty g u a r d / goto» P o d , *p o, oil o p p ii- a n c o s in clu d in g rrwcrowavo. M i d 6 0 's 4 7 2 - 4 4 4 8 . 3 - 2 3 M A K E O F F E R - O w n e r so y s Sell! 1-1V5, FP, W D , font, blind», lo c a tio n M a r y N u n - 4-1 3 n d ly R e alto r 3 4 5 -1 3 0 3 FOR SALE A u to s fo r Sole 1971 S U P E R Beetle S o p e r m e c h o m c a l/in - te rio r/b o d y cond ition. Rebuilt e n g in e Bfoupunkt A M / F M . $ 1 9 0 0 . 4 7 6 -4 1 3 8 3-21 evenings. CONDOS FOR SALE 10 mln. to UT—from $ 8 0 ,7 0 0 . Two b e d ro o m luxury co n d o s. $ 642/m th . T h e P a d d o c k P a c k a g e 1. ó'/4°/o interest Ase*»»** to-» * N o « e s e t t o e M m t Annual Percentage Rate 13.32% 2 . FHA-VA terms available. 3. Central Austin location. 4 . e Microwave Ovens e Cable TV e Refrigerators included e Covered patios, balconies e Clubhouse e Close to UT shuttle bus e Multi-level swimming pool e Covered parking e Lighted tennis court e Lighted Sport Courts e Fireplaces Marketed by M ac Bintliff & Co.. Realtors 451-2191 1510 West North Loop, one block east of Burnet Road. e 61/4 percent fixed rate first year, 8V«% second year, 10V»% fixed third year, 4th through 30th year at 13V»%. Loan will adjust to stan­ dard FN M A rate every three years after the fourth year. The loan is assumable. Payments shown are estimates only. Interest rates and prices subject to change. Annual percentage rate subject to in­ crease after consummation. sh a p e $ 3 3 0 0 3 4 6 -1 3 2 7 , 3 4 5 - 4 7 4 0 3 _________________________________19 1 5 0 0 C C L O N G B loc k '6 7 V W Beetle e n ­ gine. Runs w ell $ 2 5 0 C a ll 4 8 2 - 9 4 6 6 a f- ter 5 _______________________________ 3 -2 3 1981 C H E V Y P ick -up 2 8 , 0 0 0 miles, silver with m o g w heels. $ 4 ,1 0 0 C a ll 4 4 5 - 2 0 5 5 3 -2 3 after 5 p m M U S T SEL L 1 9 8 3 Y o m a h o R ivo C A 5 0 , lo w m ile a g e excellent m p g , to p c o n d i­ tion C o ll M ik e 8 3 5 - 7 1 3 7 __________ 3 - 2 0 1 9 7 4 H O N D A C B 3 6 0 G o o d condition, helm et, w indshield, s a d d le b a g s include d 3 -2 3 $ 3 5 0 o r b est offe r 4 7 3 - 2 3 7 7 1 9 8 0 H O N D A M B 5 Excellent condition, 19 8 2 M U S T A N G G L X a utom atic. T-Top, cruise, p o w e r options, A M / F M cassette, 3 -2 3 lo w m ile a g e $ 7 ,1 0 0 4 4 3 - 3 2 0 5 1 2 0 0 m iles G r e a t g a s m ile a g e $ 5 0 0 C o th y 451-6711 o r after 6 p m 4 7 3 - 4 3 2 4 3 - 2 3 ______________ FIAT 8 5 0 Sp id er, A M / F M , n e w radtals, n e w top, $ 8 0 0 H enry, 2 5 0 - 7 9 7 4 w ork, 2 5 9 -3 1 7 3 h o m e ___________________ 3 -2 3 1 9 8 3 7 5 0 Y o m a h a M a x im Excellent c on d itio n 2 ,9 0 0 m iles H elm et include d $ 2 , 4 0 0 1 -2 9 5 -3 6 5 1 ._______________ 3 -2 3 B E A U T IF U L 1 9 8 2 T o y o ta S u p r a S p o rt M o d e l Excellent con d itio n Electric su n­ roof, w in d o w , d o o d o c k , m irrors. R e ar w in d o w defroster, tiH, cruise, 6 w a y a d ­ ju stable sp ort seat S u p ro stereo with equalizer. M a n y other op tions. S e e to a p p re c ia te 2 8 2 - 0 9 4 7 , 4 4 3 - 3 5 5 3 3-21 M otorcycles for Sale B L A C K H O N D A C B 1 2 5 S , b o u g h t n e w July 1983, 2 ,7 0 0 miles, 5 -sp e e d , o n g m o l- fo r $ 6 7 5 G r e a t for intow n ly $1,100 riding. 7 0 m p g C a ll J a n a 4 7 5 -6 3 4 5 . (7 3 0 - 4 3 0 ) 3-21 Bicycles for Sole C H A M P I O N D U M o n d e 10 sp e e d b ic y ­ 3-19 cle $ 9 5 4 5 8 - 3 3 8 9 after 5 p m 1 9 7 3 H O N D A 3 5 0 a n d 1 9 8 0 H o n d a Twinstar. $ 4 9 5 e o c h C o ll B o b 4 7 7 - 2 6 3 5 3 -2 2 a fte rn o o n . F O R S A L E B r a n d n ew 27" M e n 's C entu- n o n A c c o r d o B icy cle $ 2 0 0 C a ll M e lis o 4 4 1 - 7 2 2 2 __________________________ 3-19 $ 1 5 0 4 5 1 - 6 9 8 5 ___________________ 3 -2 3 M U S T SE L L n e w bicycle. U n iv e g a with b lue h a n d le s a n d fra m e G r e a t co nd itio n with n e w tires $ 2 5 0 C a ll after five, D e o 3 -2 0 n o 4 8 2 - 8 2 3 9 , k e e p tryin g M E R C I A N T O U R I N G b .c v d e 1 y e a r o ld su p e rb co n d itio n P a id $1100, sell fo r $ 6 5 0 C oH Bill 4 7 2 -5 5 1 9 b e fo re 6 p m 3 Stereos for Sale R E A L IS T IC D X - 2 0 0 5 b a n d receiver 2 y e a rs old. $ 9 9 C a ll 4 4 3 6 4 5 1 6 -9 p m o n ly 3 -2 2 M u sical for Sale S T E P H E N W IS E IN S T R U M E N T S G u .tor repair, h a n d c ra fte d guitars, m an dolin s, d u lcim e rs a n d k e y b o a r d s S e rv in g Austin fo r 14 ye ars. 4 4 5 - 4 4 3 2 3 - 2 8 C L A S S IC A L R E C O R D S 2 0 % off, t o d a y t h ro u g h M a r c h 31st U s e d c lassical LPs, n e w p rivately-issue d LPs o f historic a n d live p e rfo rm a n c e s O r ig in a l 7 8 s Im m ortal P e rform a n ce s, 1 4 0 4 W 3 0 th St 4 7 8 - 9 9 5 4 ____________________________ 3 -2 0 G U IL D D 3 5 guitar, h a rd shell c a se 3-19 $ 2 2 5 4 7 8 4 8 7 0 CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE ■ NOW PRE-LEASING For Summer and Fall Apartm ents Rio Nueces Condom inium s 200 Whitis 600 W. 26th 3000 Guadalupe • Ceiling fans • Washer/dryer • Microwave • Ceiling fans • Laundry room • Private parking 474-0971[ 454-46211 454-46211 e d p o d g e t f c o m p o n y , in c . FOR SALE Misc. for Sale THE GOLDMINE W e p oy ca*fi for scrap go id and sil­ ver Class Ring» a nd old coins, d ia ­ monds a n d precious stones, w edding rings. FREE E S T IM A T E S 928-4986 W H IT E L O V E se a t fo r so le G o o d c o n d f h o n $ 1 3 0 4 8 2 9 2 8 1 C a ll e v e n in g s 3 -1 9 C O U C H G O O D c o n d itio n $ 7 5 , sm all d r a w in g typ e to b ie $ 2 5 . best o ffe r Jill 4 7 6 5 8 7 8 , e v e n in g s w e e k e n d s 3 2 0 CONDOS FORSALE 307 W. MLK G O O D D R U M S B asic O ly m p ia n three p ie c e set, plus L u d w ig h i-hat, L u d w ig b o ss p e d a l, S lin ae rfo n d sn a re with stand, Zikl ion cy m b a l with stand. $ 3 9 5 C a ll A n d y L A C R O I X S K IS , 2 0 0 's G e z e b in d in g s A l s o m e n 's m a t c h in g b ib a n d jocke t $ 7 5 C ol! K u rt D a y s 4 7 8 9 6 9 4 , n ights 3 4 6 4 3 7 3 ___________________________________3 -1 9 4 7 6 8 6 0 6 3 - 2 3 Misc. for Sale F IN E S T S O U T H W E S T E R N In d ia n te w e lry p lu s e x ce lle n t se le c tio n gifts & c a r d s N e l s o n 's Gifts, 4 5 0 2 S C o n g re s s , 4 4 4 - 3 8 1 4 H E A V Y D U T Y situo b o a rd , c u sto m m od e , v e ry d u ra b le , thick p o d d in g , w o o d steel, o n ly $ 3 0 4 8 0 - 0 5 4 2 3 - 2 3 so fa, q u e e n -size , F R A N K L I N S L E E P E R e a rth -to n e s, g u a r d e d , a s k in g sc o t c h $ 2 5 0 or best offer 4 4 2 3 0 2 7 e v e n in g s 3 -1 9 a n d w e e k e n d s F O U R D U N L O P w o o d e n ten n is rocke ts fo r sa le O n e o im o st n e w w ith gu t strings $ 2 5 T w o w ith o il-fille d n y lo n $ 1 5 O n e w ith r e g u la r n y lo n $ 1 0 C a ll 4 4 8 0 1 0 4 3 19 a fte rn o o n s . CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE RSÜ Between Guadalupe & Lavaca 9-6 Daily Sim plify Your Se arch W alk On Over 479-6618 S A L E Over 100 Listings to Choose From Oranoe Tree 1 1 Cron 21 22 Preservation Square 1 1 Nueces Place 1 1 Windtree 2 2 Spnng H dow 1 1 H>oe Park 1 1 Chestnut Square 1 1 ’ Somerset 2 2 Greenwood Towers 1 1 2 2 The Potnte i 1 Cottonwood 1 1 L E A S E Condos Starting $375 up to $ 1,250 Buena Vista 2 2 Cottonwood 1 1 G ^e bo l 1 Quadrangle 2 2 E d g e d * 2 1 ’ , Spnng HoBow 2 2 Talsman2 2 2507 Quarry 21 ’ j 2813’ , P » Grande n Avenue A 1 1 Croa 22 Nueces Comer 2 w lott ..SELLS & RESELLS RESERVED for the top .072% of your class. A CLASSIC APPROACH TO CONTEMPORARY ELEGANCE. re m agin e a residen ce w here the beautv of O ld W orld d esig n has beenjoin ed with presen t-d av practicality T h at's The Palladian, a su p erior condom inium now offering tw o bedroom two bath h om es. G raced with such featu res a s ceiling fans, g re en h o u se w in dow s, french d oors an d ceram ic hie entries, kitchens an d bath s. P lus tim e-saving convenien ces like m icrow ave ov en s an d w ash er dryer units. D iscover for vou rself this beautiful com m unity at The U n iversity's d o o rstep With its secu ntv gate entrv, on-site parking, p ool and h eated spa. Ih e Palladian rep resen ts the ultim ate in cam p u s accom m od ation s WHERE A SENSE OF TRADITION MEETS THE SPIRIT OF TODAY. 'Y ehind the prestigious brick walls of The r-K Vanderbilt lies a w orld m ade tor JLJ contemporary living. One and two bedroom condom inium s with e v en convenience e v e n luxun Including — • Ceiling tans in living area' • All appliances including microwave oven, washer and dryer • Ceramic tile in entnes kitchens and baths • Home secuntv w stem s (ust a few block.- from U T The \ anderbiJt en|0Vs secuntv-gate en tn . abundant parking and a pool with heated lacuzzi -.pa For viles informa hon call Benchmark Properties at 480-0097 For sales inform ation, call Benchm ark P roperties at 480-00^” 910 West 22nd Street Xu'tin T exa' 7870=1 Developed bv Vanderbilt Condom inium s Partnership 712 W est 21st Street, A ustin, I X 78705 D eveloped bv H A P 11 Joint V enture ‘7 k — ' VANDERBILT The best com pany on cam pu s com es hom e to St. T hom as. Located adjacent to Croix in the heart of the w est cam pus comm unity, St. T hom as offers u n su rp asse d condom inium living exclusively limited to a prestigious 36 units. S p acio u s one and tw o-bedroom floorplans feature a full range of luxury appointm ents. Add to that richly lan dscaped grounds, a courtyard fountain, heated pool and spa, secured covered parking and private balcony decks. Availability is limited and earh interest is advised . First student hom es will be available in May, 1984. For exceptional student li\ ing in a class by itself come discover St. Thom as. the Surpassing the tradition that began with Croix. 807 West 25th St. Austin, Texas 472-8605 Another fine student community from B.L. Turlington and Associates, Inc , developers of Croix Condominiums. Graham Place Condomtnums. Nueces Comer Condominiums, Centennial Condominiums and Chelsea Condominiums PALLADIAN Plan on a Lenox Condominium. TWO BATHS N o u o N & e n . UJICC M Y R C O M ie MAK6 A M OF M Y mom w ill ve 60 J e a i o o s o f m e WACKVk) ÍÍW1RY... &0B9i HOW MUCH diet O-Pi THIi W W L H O L A ZITZMeN THAT'S lOADEO... MO MORE JESTER CHIUNAC. THE UVIN6RXTA AND D/M /W 6 FOR PtEtJTY OF FAPY R S O M . . . O R M O V E THE FVWTVRB AMP RAY football ok most am ab&bics session OUR DaoKimAY To A N A vje&mb n ueao sto th e m e tr r com, pool 4MJNA A NOmlKLKBL THEY CALL THIS A closet pot its moke, cike a drive- incloset In q uire N o w For Fall O ccupancy! cook ' c a m o w m m sH ers AÑO DZYBK...N0 MOKE ¿CANINA 0 A p TO THE PSYCHOS IN THE l m j ñ d k o m a t ! INTRODUCING WTLSTVIEW HONDAMINHJMS & NOTE TUB p ik e p la c e pok. C ozy e v e n in g s ■■ ano so w e d o n 't HAVE TO EAT ANY NOKE MICROWAVED TBKTf 4LATÍEKEP AROUND P0R EFFECT IN CASE MOM OR G A D DROPS dY. W alk over to our sales office today. Get copies o f the spacious floor plans and start doing some planning o f your own. T H E LENOX- C O N D O M I N I U M S West 23rd and San Gabriel (512) 469-0851 The lucky first ten people who buy a Wcstview Condom inium will receive a H onda Spree— the low-maintenance alternative to cars that scoots you to class with alm ost no gas. And your Westview Condom inium , at 2804 Rio Grande, helps keep your life in the fast lane— with low'er level covered parking, stacked washer/dryers, microwaves, a beautiful pool, and more. Call Krasoff Builders today about a one or two bedroom Westview Hon- daminium. We ll put-put you in the right place. Located at 2X04 Rio Hr ande in the West Campus area. From 573,500, West Campus CONDOMINIUMS A project of Krasoff Builders. For information call (512) 478-8369. Projected occupancy d ate— Ju n e , 1984. CONDOS F O tSA Ii CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE FURN. APARTMENTS FURN. APARTMENTS FURN. APARTMENTS FURN. APARTMENTS tílOWNEA ^ ■ financing 5 % DELOW MARKET 479-6618 476-7238 \ I— BUY A CONDO — GET A U.T. SCHOLARSHIP '■.'¿00 - y a fo i -) FOR SALE Misc. fo r Sola WATERBED W/h»oter $225 Hide-A- Bed couch $240 Color TV $175 Dining 3-20 set w/4 choirs $115 458 5604 HOBIE 16 Excellent condition Trailer ex­ 3 23 tras $2,400 441-3569 NEWSPAPERS UNLIMITED N ew in town? Do you miss your hometown newspoper? If so, Newspapers Unlimited can have your hometown paper delivered right to your door. W e sell all major Houston, Austin and Dt las papers ond it will only cost Vi the regular subscription price on most papers. If you need more information, why don't you give o ld Tim a call at 4 4 7 -8 7 2 8 . THANKYOU Homes fo r Sale 805 W 28Vj St Total 4BR, 2BA, $175 0 00 Owner/agent Dotsy Shrake 3-30 327-6772,472-1000 Property Management Made Easy... C.L Rm v w Rm I Estate 477-8303 C0NNE Homes e Duplexes e Condos C c y n Savannah 911 West 22Vi at San Gabriel Twelve two bedroom flats and studios Priced from $94,000 Twenty Three Hundred Leon 2300 Leon Street Ten two bedroom flats and studios Priced from $92,000 GSI specializes in small, private condominium projects located in the convenient West Campus area Both Savannah and Twenty Three Hundred Leon feature • electronic security access • private balconies or decks • tiled courtyards • extensive amenity package. Available for Spring '84 occupancy 11.75% A R M financing available G O ULD /ShW XER NTERESTS'REAL ESTATE NVESTKCNTS 811 Nueces For information phone 473-2031 • S opftsttoftd Condo • Walk to Law School FURN. APARTMENTS For The Serious Student Cal Ann E. Legg 327-7900/327-0190 • Quw* Hyde P®* Neighborhood VIP APTS One bedroom Walk to com­ pos Available immediately Colt 476- 3-23 0 363 CONDOS FOR SALE 901 W 24 24Ui Si Croat O range Tree Apple Tree B e le v u e San G abriel W est Pecan Walk P re servatio n Square P re servatio n S quare W es. Piece W est Place o m e n n * a t C entennial LEASING FOR SPRING l t b o n u s W h itis Place 2 2 Caswefl Place 2 2 lo ti 3200 Duval 1 l G azebo 1-1 2 31 3 L o n g v ie w 2 2 3-2 1 1 G raham Place A pple T ree 1 1 upp te i ree 2 2 W e d g e w o o d W e d g e w o o d 2 2 P osada Del Rey 2 2 P osada Del Rey 2 2 M ore L istin g s A vailable M ore L isting s A vailable m A T A m . # R a ■ » 0 ^ 0 ■ W . R I ^ 0 ^ 0 m # M W 0 0 ^ . ^ 0 W T r _ . r . 1 When you ve sold 425 condominiums this year already, you realize that when it comes to condos. LINDA INGRAM s the name! LET DADDY’S MONEY BUY YOU A CONDO FOR SPRING! DELPHI OPEN HOUSE Saturday & Sunday 10a.m.-6p.m. A G ^ I P H 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 I Beautifully Designed Condominiums In Eight Distinctive Plans 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths & 2 Bedrooms, 2 'h Baths w/Study EXCELLENT AMENITIES: • TEXAS SHAPED HOT TUB • AUDIO VISUAL SECURITY • FIREPLACES • CEILING FANS a STACKED WASHER/DRYER 706 W. 24th CONTACT: CYNTHIA LEE The Daly Texan/Monc iy, March 19,1984/Page 17 THE UNIVERSITY O f TEXAS AT AUSTIN FAMILY STUDENT HOUSING IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY: Two bed­ room unfumahed apartments in Brocken- ndge $299 per month. Mobile Home lots, 12'x60', $53 per month. $100 secur­ ity deposit required University o l Texas at Austin registered students only. Contact the Division of Housing and Food Service weekdays, 8:30-4 30. 471-3136 ESQUIRE APARTMENTS, North campus area Efficiency Corpet, AC, appliances, $225 r E 451-8122, Westwodd Real Estate WEST CAMPUS Large 2BR apartment in fourplex, available Feb 4 Five blocks to campus, walk or shuttle $450 + E Ken McWilliams 327 5000, after 6pm, 478 2410._____________________________ NEW EFFICIENCIES $350-$395 plus utilities 4 blocks campus Howell Propei ties 477-9925 1BR O N IF shuttle Gas, water & cable paid $275 t E until May $235 ♦ E for 4 10 summer 478-6148 1BR 1BA condo Ceiling fans and many extras Available May 15th 3316 Gua 3-30 dalupe 255-7877 after 5 30pm WALK TO campus, shuttle and city bus Large efficiency, 2BR, 2BA efficiencies Mauno Kai, 405 E 31st St 472-2147 LIVE CLOSER 1 bedroom Rio Nueces on end Sublease through May $ 360 * electricity 474-0971 Deb #H175 3-28 SU M M E R LEA SIN G 1 SPECIAL ACT V II ANOTHER WORLD BARRISTER MANOR CASTLE ARMS CHIMNEYSWEEP LANTANA LORRAIN PARK PLACE PENTHOUSE THREE ELMS THUNDERBIRD WINFLO 1BR 1&2BR 1BR 1&2BR EFF.1&2BR 1,2,&3 BR 1&2BR 1&2BR 1,2,43 BR 1&2BR EFF.&1BR EFF. 459-3082 4303 DUVAL 458-3661 415W .39TH 472-7315 3301 REDRIVER 472-2819 3121 SPEEDWAY 451-8083 105W. 38’ j 478-7519 1802 WEST AVE. 474-1341 1401 ENFIELD RD. 474-8702 809 WINFLO 1801 RIO GHANDIi 476-2084 452-6024 400W .35TH 458-3607 4510 DUVAL 478-5488 808 WINFLO J ID 346-7230 NVE™ 346-7230 | Lease in the BEST LOCATION For the BEST PRICE!! •SETONAVE. •PARAPET •NUECES PLACE •STONESTHROW •BUENA VISTA •LANTERN LANE Call Proven Properties 4 7 4 -5 8 7 0 ALL BILLS PAID Efficiencies, CA/CH, walk or shuttle to UT. $280. 2212 San Gabriel FLEURS DE LIS 4 0 4 E. 30th Large 1BR immediately available 2 blocks north of campus. Nicely fur­ nished and carpeted. Covered park­ ing available $ 3 7 5 + E. Coll Cliff Musgrave 476-7011. 1BR EFFICIENCY $ 2 5 0 Reduced apartment. O n shuttle. rent for plush furnished 4105 Speedway # 10 3: 451-4919 104 E. 32nd *103 4 7 6 -5 9 4 0 UNEXPECTED VACANCY Large wed-lit efficiency near UT ond shuttle. Walk-in closet, dishwasher, private patio. $ 2 8 5 + E. 4 5 3 -7 9 9 5 , 4 5 3 -0 5 5 5 . BEE HIVE APARTMENT 4 2 0 9 Avenue B FURN. APARTMENTS T h e A r b o r | § | W orth Leaving Home For! At the Arbor, w e have efficiencies and spacious one and tw o bed ro o m apa rt­ ments w ith gas cooking, heating and hot water PAID. O u r amenities in clu de a large pool, laundry rooms, and fireplaces as w e ll as balconies. All this at the first stop on the R.C. shuttle route. W e are now' preleasing for the summer w ith SUMMER RATES! W e are also preleasing for the Fall. So com e and reserve your apartment today! 1500 Royal Crest 444-7516 UNBELIEVABLE SUMMER RATES! • FURNISHED AND CARPETED • FULLY EQUIPPED KITCHENS • EFFICIENT ELEVATOR SERVICE • INTERCOM SYSTEM • CONVENIENT LOCATION • EXERCISE ROOM AND EQUIPMENT • CABLE TELEVISION HOOK-UP • CONVENIENT LAUNDRY FACILITIES • GARAGE PARKING AVAILABLE • AIR CONDITIONED • MAID SERVICE AVAILABLE • GUEST ROOMS AVAILABLE • RESERVED STUDY AREA • ACTIVE SOCIAL PROGRAM TRI-TOWERS 801 W. 24TH ST. AU STIN , TEXAS 78705 (512) 476-7639 Page 18/The Daly Texan/Monday, March 19,1984 CONDOS FOR RENT" CONDOS FOR R E N T ~ FURN. APARTMENTS- UNFURN, APARTMENTS CONDOS FOR RENT MUSICAL INSTRUCTION^ TYPING TYPING E M P L O Y M E N T SERVICES 1948 G R EYH O UND bus oportment 2 5 2 9 Silomor #11 4 4 7 -7 4 3 6 ,4 4 1 -2 3 1 8 _________________________________ 3 -2 3 FURNISHED EFFICIENCY 1011 W 23rd Gosh darn nice Cozy ond quiet, small complex wrth nice neighbors Call Bill 4 7 7 -7 8 0 0 _______________________3 3 0 WEST CAMPUS Large 2BR apartm ent in Fourplex Five blocks to campus, walk or shuttle $ 4 5 0 + E. Ken McWilliams, 3 2 7 - 5 0 0 0 , alter 6pm 4 78-2410. NEAR CAMPUS, on shuttle N ew ly re­ modeled 1BR in smoll quiet complex. $ 2 8 5 + E Avoilable April 1. 4 5 1 -8 5 3 2 , 4 4 2 -4 0 7 6 3 -2 3 UNFURN. APARTMENTS SIIIIIIIIIIIIH IIH IIIIIIM IIIIIIIIIIIIIIft ¡ ¡ SAGEBRUSH i = 2604 Manor Rd. 1 md W *. M mow It. Gas t E s r t l E ha* prid. S ntwtoa to am pa. E CloM to t e r it . Ljrgt pool aid 10% Spring Student Discount “Pre-leasing for summer” $2904440 month 478-0992 S fO fik+ oom 3~6om orw ct.) • llllllllllllllllllH IIIIIIM I M llllllir 12 MONTH LEASE DISCOUNT Nica to ost location, 1 block south of Townlake, tpocious 2 bedroom opts., large walk-in closets, CA-CH, large pool, laundry facilities, gas, wa­ ter paid, on UT shuttle line, starting at ter pox $330 1201 Tinnin Ford 444-3411 Billie Foord CONSUL APTS. G R EA T L O C A T IO N Large 1BR 1BA, $325 + E. Covered poncing, laundry room, pool, new car­ pet ond drapes. Cleon, quiet commu­ nity on both shuttle and city bus lines. Come on by 415 W. 39th St., mana­ ger in #106 or coll 458-3661. Anoth­ er World Apartments. Professionally manoged by J.l.D. Investments. 1BR O N IF shuttle Gas, water A cable paid $ 2 7 5 h £ until M ay $ 2 3 5 + E for 4-10 summer. 4 7 8 -6 1 4 8 GREAT 1BR efficiency, refrigerator, water paid. $ 2 7 5 . Small 1BR with study $ 2 7 5 . A t 2 2 5 W North Loop, # 2 0 5 and #101. Carlene Beall, T.I.P., 4 7 9 -0 5 0 5 , 4 4 3 - 4 9 2 6 ____________________________3 -2 3 1BR, NICE neighborhood, wolking dis­ tance to campus. W ater A gas paid Q ui­ et graduate student preferred $ 3 0 0 month. 8 0 3 W, 17th. 4 7 7 -6 9 3 3 . Avail­ 3 -2 0 able April 1st. 1BR GARAGE apt with appliances at 7071*2 E. 49th. $285/m o n th through summer Frank: 4 5 4 -9 2 1 8 evenings. 3 -2 3 NEAR IF shuttle, nice 1 and 2BR in quiet complex. Pool $ 3 0 5 - $ 3 8 0 + E. 4 5 3 - 3 -2 3 7 5 1 4 ,4 4 2 -4 0 7 6 . PRESENTS GRACIOUS LIVING W O O D L A N D S II C O N D O M IN IU M S 2500 BURLESON ROAD 1 BEDROOMS $365-$410 1 BEDROOMS w/Loft $460-9500 "Ceiling Fans "Large Closets "Microwaves "W/D Connections "Pool ^443-5035 447-8303^ | IT'S TIME TO PRELEASE Y O U R C O N D O FOR SUMMER A N D FA LL! Call: Jessica Backus Leasing M anager 4 7 9 -6 6 1 8 Let U s S a v e Y o u : • Headaches • Phone Calls • Time • Showing/Advertising • Qualifying N CO-OP HOUSING CO-OP HOUSING CO-OP HOUSING A t t r a c t i v e S t u d e n t m a n a g e d F u l l y f u r n i s h e d C o m p u t e r C o - o p D a r k r o o m C o - o p F r i e n d l y , a c t i v e c o m m u n i t y I n t r a m u r a l s p o r t s t e a m s P a r t ie s S p e a k e r s E v e n ts M a n a g e m e n t e x p e r i e n c e a nd t r a i n i n g Poo l A / C C o - e d H o m e c o o k e d m e a ls C o n v e n i e n t : 4 b l o c k s w e s t o f c a m p u s ; o n t h e s h u t t l e r o u t e L O W RATES fo r room, board, u t i l i t i e s a n d g re at li v in g S U M M E R F A L L : S in gl es s t a r t a t $ 4 2 5 / 6 w k . ses si on D o u b l e s s t a r t a t $ 3 1 7 . 5 0 / 6 w k . se ss io n S i n g l e s s t a r t at $ 3 4 9 / m o . D o u b l e s s t a r t a t $ 2 5 9 / m o . ARK, 2000 Pearl • TAOS, 2612 Guadalupe • 21st ST, 707 W. 21 LAUREL HOUSE, 1905 Nuecess FOR MORE IN FO R M ATIO N : 476-5678, office at 2000 Pearl ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD WALK TO campus. Largest apt., pool A heated spa, free heat A water. 1 A 2 b ed­ room $ 2 9 5 to $ 3 2 5 . Avail N ow ! CaR for appointment Security Bldg. Application A 4 -3 references. 4 7 9 -8 2 6 6 CENTRALLY LOCATED LUXURY C O N ­ D O M IN IU M S NEAR H A N C O C K CEN ­ TER. 1-1, appkancM, calling fon, firaploce, adaquoto storaga. $ 3 5 5 ASI Company, 4 -2 4 3 4 5 -9 6 4 3 . 1-1 IN small complex available now $ 2 7 5 M anager 4 7 7 -3 1 7 0 The Elliott 3 -2 2 System. NEWLY REMODELED efficiencies, 1 and 2BR, some with fireplaces and skylights. Convenient north central location. N ear IF shuttle Pool $ 2 7 0 - $ 4 0 0 + E, 451- 3 -2 3 4 5 6 1 ,4 4 2 4 0 7 6 ROOMMATES NEED G W M roommate to ihare 1BR/ 1BA near IE route Nonsmoker, easy going, $ 2 0 0 monlh ABP 451-1763 after 3 -2 6 10 30am leave messoge FEMALE NEEDED to shore new 2 -2 con­ do 3 blocks UT, pool, yicuzzi, security, W D , microwove, and ok extras. 4 7 9 - 6231 Debbie_____________________ 3-19 NICE HOUSE Responsible older student (25 + ) to shore large old house near LBJ School $185 mo + '/3 bills. Call Bain 4 7 4 - 5 6 3 5 _______________________ 3 -2 0 M /F TO shore 4BR house, Borton Hills, $ 176.50 + Vs bills, own both John 4 4 8 - 3318 3 -2 0 HOUSEMATE W A N TE D lo rg e 3BR house close to UT, downtown Prefer ma­ ture person, references please. Avertable 3-21 April 1 Call after 6pm, 4 8 2 -0 3 0 2 G W M SEEKS some to share 2 bedroom oportment in Clarksville Must be respon­ sible, clean, discreet. Prefer mature indi­ vidual with healthy, lifestyle Send letter Indicating your interests ond concerns to 5 0 4 W . 24th Box # 6 2 , Aus­ 3-21 tin, 7 8 7 0 5 Include phone number relaxed R O O M M ATE NEEDED immediately ond for summer 3 -2 house, lorge yard, W D . $130 * '/5 bills. 290E & IH -35. Co» 9 2 6 - 4 5 8 4 anytime. 3 -2 3 G R E E N W O O D TOWERS condo. 18th and Lavaca 2-2 furnished, ABP, summer and/or fall lease, summer $ 5 0 0 per month, foil $ 7 0 0 negotiable Call Jim Ro­ 3 -2 8 bison at 3 2 7 -0 9 4 3 anytime. Furnished Luxury Condo 2813 Rk> Grande Brand new, 2 bed 2 both, some split level elegant oportments. Fireplace, microwove, fans, intercom, spa, secur­ ity, covered parking, smaM complex. Now leasing for summer & foil. Stort­ ing $750 444-2750, 474-6683, 447-7264 UNFURN. DUPLEXES NORTHEAST LARGE 2 2 avertable 4-1 84. 2 story, vaulted ceding, CA-CH, car­ pet, drapes, carport, storaga room, fenced bockyard $ 4 3 5 4 41-5574; 4 7 9 - 8 1 0 0 _____________________________ 4 -2 LARGE 2-1 2416-A Burleson N e a r shut­ tle, fireploce, fenced yard, pets ok. T I P Codene Beoll 4 7 9 -0 5 0 5 , 4 4 3 -4 9 2 6 .3 - ___________________________________ 23 VERY NEAR UT Beoutiful 3-1, lovely neighborhood, hardwoods, dishwasher, disposal, refrigerator, stove $ 7 5 0 4 7 9 - 6153. N o pets. ENJOY DUPLEX LIVING... 2*1 ON SHUTTLE 0LT0RF-BURLES0NRD. RR0UCCS*FBCB> VMDSeMMY EXTRAS 420“ C.L. REEVES CONNIE 447-8303 |ozz, GUITAR LESSONS R&B, blues, rock, also beginning boss. Your choice of materials, reasonable rates. Andy Bullmg- ton 4 5 9 -0 1 3 9 ____________________ 3 23 SAXOPHONE, CLARINET, flute lessons from o grod student with 8 years teach­ ing experience. Coll Ron 4 7 8 -7 4 5 0 3 -9 SERVICES P H O TO S for PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 minute service M0N-FR110-6 SAT 10-2 477-5555 THE THIRD EYE 2 5 3 0 G U A D A L U P E NEED A Post Office Box! UT area N o woiting list Private M ailbox Rentals (across from the Castilian) Coll 477-1915. 5 0 4 W 24th __________ FURNITURE M O V IN G Protected trans­ port in my large cargo von Three years experience Steve, 4 4 1 -7 9 3 0 ___________ TW O BROTHERS M O V IN G HOUSE HOLDS APTS, OFFICES. PIANOS RELI­ ABLE, INSURED FRIENDLY SERVICE, BEST RATES IN T O W N 8 3 4 -9 8 9 2 3 30 TAX RETURN. Prepored at your home Reasonable rates. Coll 346-1812 after _____ 4-13 5pm for an appointment TWELVE STEP meeting for bulimics, anorexics, ond overeaters 441 7 3 9 8 3 28 Free of charge. KEHRES A U D IO All Type loudspeoke repair, musicol electronic raw repair speaker soles. 3108 N Lamar # 1 0 3 (5 1 2 )4 5 2 -2 2 0 2 Blvd 4-13 ROOMS TUTORING BOYS W A LK IN G distance to UT Fur­ nished rooms, $199-5215 all bifls paid Howe» Properties, 4 7 7 -9 9 2 5 . M A TH TUTOR $ 10/hr Ph D student, quality tutoring Try us and compare W hy pay more for less. 4 6 7 -8 0 3 8 3 20 FEMALE HOUSEMATE Nice 2BR north central. Prefer mature grad student, working person, quiet Nonsmoker. $180 mo + V2 Nils 4 5 9 - 4 2 8 7 after 5pm. 3-19 NEED R O O M I Graduating UT wanted unfurnished room in clean, nonsmoking environment with relaxed, secure, confi­ dent people South-central H ave cot, con pay $150, $ 2 0 0 ABP Coll Elyce 4 4 4 - 5 5 3 9 ____________________________ 3-19 N E A T , RESPONSIBLE nonsm oking female share beautiful 2 -lV2 2 -story townhome Cozy cobblestone fireplace, patio, deck, hot tub All this for only $ 2 4 7 .5 0 + V i E. Carolyn 4 4 2 -3 2 6 9 .3 - 21 G /W /M to share 2-1 Vi central duplex; immoculate condition, hardwood floors, ceiling fans, W C, AC, dishwasher; $ 2 7 5 + V? bills, $215 deposit Co» Ray 4 7 8 - 7 3 8 6 after 6 _____________________ 3 -2 3 FEMALE R O O M M A TE neededl 2BR, 1BA, North Austin, near shuttle, $173 I V; electric Coll 4 6 7 -2 1 4 2 ._________ 3 -2 8 GRADUATE STUDENT or professional nonsmoking female to share new home, private both. North Austin Co» after 3 -2 3 10pm: 8 3 6 -5 6 4 7 , UNFURNISHED HOUSES AVAILABLE NOW two and three bed­ room older homes, apartments. Coll now for 24 hour information. 452-5979. HYDE PARK, 2-1, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, ceiling fan, fireploce, tile, carpet, hardwood floors. $590 No dogs. 451-8122 West Worid Real Estate 1BR GARAGE apt with appliances at 707Vi E 49th $285/month through summer Frank: 454-9218 evenings. 3-23 CONDOS FOR RENT I FREE I LOCATING SERVICE a Coodoe e ApertnraU • Houeee 9 ▼ Da p in e * All Location! — $300 And Up ♦ b u b i f a f b c j r i f r t W H L JBUSUJ LUXURY FURNISHED condo. W alk to lV^BA, fireplace, ceiling campus, 2BR, fans, washer/dryer Microwave, pool 3 -2 8 $ 7 2 5 Coll M o m e 458-1102 G R E E N W O O D TOWERS C O N D O 18th & Lavaca 2-2 furnished, ABP summer a nd/or fall lease, summer $ 5 0 0 per month, fall $ 7 0 0 negotiable Call Jim Ro­ 3 -2 8 bison at 3 2 7 -0 9 4 3 anytime BEST 1BR condo! Hyde Park, 114 E 31st Has everything W asher/dryer, mi­ crowave, ceiling fan, fireplace. N ew ond modern. $ 4 9 5 Heogerty 3 4 3 -0 2 7 5 .3 - 20 CROIX C O N D O M IN IU M . Fum.shed 1 large bedroom, bath, fireplace, washer/ dryer, microwave, ceiling fan Available for 1 year's lease. Summer rote $ 5 0 0 / month $ 6 7 5 / Fall-Spnng Semester month 1 month deposit 1 -8 0 0 -3 9 2 - 3 -2 3 2441, M ary Caroer EXCELLENT LO CATIO N. Room oi G oo- da» W ooten dorm. Free moid service Subleased for $150 a month. 4 7 6 -3 8 6 9 , 3 -2 0 472 -1 3 4 3 PRIVATE D O R M room / coed / bills paid / kitchen privileges / near UT / Low, mid- semester rates, AC CaR 4 7 7 -1 5 2 9 3 -2 2 CLASSY R O O M in Enfield residence Available rent-free to quiet, studious per son willing to handle housekeeping ond errands. C ar required. CoH Rick at 4 7 7 - 3 -3 0 0 7 0 2 G ENTLEM AN Quiet attractive furnished bedroom, private home N e a r University, shuttle 4 5 2 -5 5 0 5 7-9am , 12-2pm. 5- 3 -2 3 7pm. ROOM AND BOARD THE CASTILIAN is now occeptmg appli­ cations for the Summer $ 3 9 4 for a dou ble, $ 5 5 5 for a single, each session Pnce includes 15 scrumptious meals per week Stop by far a tour today! The Castilian. 2 3 2 3 San Antonio, 7 8 7 0 5 478-9811 for more information.____________________ MISC. FOR RENT FROZEN MARGARITA, cocktail machines for large parties Morgantaville Jay at 4 5 4 -9 7 2 4 Nights, 8 3 7 -0 8 9 0 3 9 0 4 8 3 7 W a n t t o h a v e a P a r ty O u t in t h e C o u n t r y , B u t C a n 't F in d a P la c e ? Eagles N est Ranch, Lockhart, Texas, is n o w leasing its private park on w e e k ­ ends. F eotunng a lorge BB Q pit. p ic ­ nic three ponds, pter, a n d w alk brid ge N ig h t tim e lighting is a v a ila b le . For leasing inform atio n call tables, restroom focilihes, Phil N o h ro Austin 9 2 6 - 9 6 1 6 Lockhart 3 9 8 - 6 9 5 9 CO-OP HOUSING TAOS CO-OP H O M E C O O K E D M E A L S . B R E A K FA S T. L UNCH, D IN N ER ? YO U R CH O IC E. Y O U 'R E W E L C O M E CALL FOR RATES 474-6905 WANTED RESPONSIBLE DOCTORAL student with family wants to house-sit, Summer, 1984 3 -2 7 Call evenings (214) 5 6 6 -4 1 4 5 for visiting parents NEED HOUSE / Condo to rent June 15- 3 0 If you need housesitters, call Anne Daniels 4 7 3 -2 1 6 5 or 4 5 1 -3 9 9 4 _____________________ 3 -2 3 WILL HOUSESIT/SUBLET M ature krw student woriung in Austin seeks housing for M ay/June Terms flexible Tom Pinan- ski, 3 9 0 9 Spruce Tree, Box 148, Philadel­ 3 -2 3 phia, PA 19104 215-662-1177 PUBLIC NOTICES Notice TO ALL PERSONS HAVING CLAIMS AGAINST THE ESTATE OF MARY JANE TAYLOR, DECEASED Notice is hereby given that the Origi­ nal Letters Testamentary for the Estate of Mary Jone Taylor were issued on February 27, 1984, Cause No. 47,428, pending in the County Court of Travis County, Texas to Dodi Ulja, a resident of Travis County, Texas and her post office address is 1216 Ameri­ can Bank Tower, Austin, Texas 78701. All persons having claims against this Estate which is currently being admin­ istered are required to present them within the time and within the manner prescribed by the law. Dated the 27 day of February, 1984. Dodi Lilja / £ PRIVATE PROFESSIONAL TU TO R IALS IN : • Math (dl lovols) • Science • Foreign Languages • Computer Languages • Speed Reading • English Composition • ISL • TOEFL Preparation AUSTIN LEA R N IN G CENTER 3907 Medical Parkway, Suite 102 452-5519 ATTN: STUDENTS DPA 310 333 333K WILL TUTOR 837-1662 PERSONAL SINGLES-COUPLES A unique «rey to meet people witti xtrnier eexuei xiterests end deeiree CAPITAL. SWING CLUB m e completely confident# in­ troduction service Send $5 00 to C S C. Box 3635. Austin. Texee 78746 tor deteie and a sample magazine TYPING Master Typist, Inc. # t, C A L L 472 0293 F 0 I T T n N C /W O ID P tO C E S S W G RUSH WORK SPECIALISTS T h a i s a n d D t o M f t a t t o u . T a n a p a p a r a . R e to m a s a n d C o v e r L a t í a n 3 6 D o b le M a i l hoi Putei AUSTIN TYPING SERVICE 7-Yr. Academic Specialists Tern & Graduate Papers • Resumes Copes R Spral Binding 4 OskSkxage MUSICAL INSTRUCTION La Promenade Center, Suite 133 7115 Burnet R d .-453-105$ EXPERIENCED PlA N O /guitar instruction, beginner-odvonce. UT music degree. UT area. 4 5 9 -4 0 8 2 , after 5 p.m. P IA N O LESSONS. Beginner through a d ­ vanced. Experienced, qualified teocher improvised styles. 4 5 3 - Classical and 4-13 9 6 9 6 . ROOM AND BOARD Call Us! v b A Q i TYFIN6, PRINTING, BINDING Tht Complete Professional FULLTIM E TYPING SERVICE RESUMES Yes we type FRESHMAN THEMES So (tort out att good pads» 2707 HEMPHILL PARK A t 2 7 1 h It G u o d o lu p . Plenty el Forking 472-3210 472-7677 RESUMES $15 m.ludv'' 2^ •opr* % 447-9257 W0RDMASTER., 1900 E Ottorl Sule 110 Word Proc*»#ng . Cop»* W o rd s - p m * - TYPING W ORD PR O C ES SIN G • - • 472-2684 2404 Rio Grande 1’ ir t id A u i . r k '1 T Y P IN G SBRVICX 443-4433 PROFESSIONAL TYPIST Accurate ser vice, fast turnaround. Theses, disserta­ tions, professional reports, etc. Barbara Tullos, 4 5 3 -5 1 2 4 resumes, TYPING REPORTS, charts, theses, etc. Rush |obs occepted Coll 8am- 10pm Reasonable rates Carolyn 4 5 9 - 9 5 2 7 TYPING $ 1 0 0 page Legol-$l.25 Profes­ sional, expenenced typist IBM Selectnc II (N ear UT compus) Rushers welcome1 4-5 4 7 7 -5 4 5 6 TEXT PROCESSING English assistance spelling, punctuation, grammar aid. Com putenzed services Persuasive resumes with flair Personal ottention Rush service available Creative Services, 2 4 2 0 G ua­ 3 -3 0 dalupe, 4 7 8 -3 6 3 3 EXPERT W O R D processing You con trust your dissertation or thesis with te e Starr Equations and resumes. 4 44-0801 OVERSEAS JOBS Summer, yeor round Europe, S Amer, Australia Asw All fields. $ 9 0 0 -5 2 0 0 0 month S.ghtsee.na Free info Write UC, P.O. Box 52-TX2 3-12 Corono Del Mor, CA 9 2 6 2 5 AIRLINES HIRING! STEWARDESSES, Renervatiomstsl S 1 4-$39,000 W odd- w idei Coll for Directory, G uide, Newsletter 1(916)944-4444 ext UTEX- AUSTINAIR. _________ CRUISESHIPS HIRING' $ 1 6 -$ 3 0 ,0 0 0 ' Conbbean, Hawou, ^ ^ ^ a l for Guide, Directory, Newsletter ’ (916)’ 44_ 3 -2 7 4 4 4 4 ext UTEXAUSTINCRUISE AtASKA JOBS ond travel information! W nte Atasco Bo, 3 0 7 5 2 . Seattle. W A 98103 _ INTERNSHIPS IN D.C.It W e will match you with a Washington office Interested? Contact Washington Internship Ptoce ment Service P.O Box 4 3 7 5 , Ann Arbor M l 48104 MELINDA'S PROFESSIONAL TYPING _ Dissertations, theses, PRs, Noon to M id ­ night Vicinity IH 35 & 32nd. 479-8871 HELP WANTED LETTER PERFECT TYPING SERVICE W ord processing you con afford 'W e core about your protect " 8 9 2 -5 2 8 9 3- 21 LINDA'S TYPING South Fost, occurate, inexpensive 4 4 2 -7 4 6 5 after 5pm PROFESSIONAL ACADEM IC TYPIST, ex ­ tensive PR, thesis, legal, technical experi­ ence $1 35. mctudes rush, spelling, punc­ tuation Potncia Henderson, BA., 4 6 7 - 3 -2 3 0167 (Lomar/55th) SA TISFA C TIO N G U A R A N TEED 2 0 years experience typing theses, disserta tions, low papers Former legal secretary with BBA in Secretarial Studies Maxine 3 2 7 -0 1 0 9 _________________________4 ^ QUALITY TYPING Professional, efficient, occurate Term papers, dissertations, equations, and charts Standard poge P,co $ 1 0 0 , Ekte $1 20 4 7 7 -5 1 3 9 MS 3-22 route TYPING $1 2 0 poge $5 0 0 for pickup delivery experienced South Kay 445-0 1 0 8 Professional, TYPING - RESEARCH papers, dissertations, resumes, statistical. 15 years typing expenence Fast occurate. rea­ 4-9 sonable. 441-1893 95c DOUBLE spaced poge Rushers wel­ come at no extra charge Co» 385 -1 7 6 4 anytime Antonette Rhodes _______ 3-3 0 SPFEDWAY TYPING 4 7 2 -4 0 3 9 From $ 1 6 5 / Page Also Rush/Ovemight/Su- 7 3 0 a m - peRush 37th Speedway 3 -2 8 Midnight Reliable D O W N T O W N AREA Fast seance by expenenced typist $1 0 0 page CoH after six weekmghts, anytime weekends. 442 8 0 0 0 ____________________________3-73 EXPERIENCED TYPIST with reasonable rates and in lost turnaround North Austin Call Noncy 2 5 5 -7 4 2 0 5-4 located CHECK OUR RATES' Typing wonted IBM equipment used Rush ond delivery ser 4-13 vice avoiioble Call 2 6 3 2 2 9 6 PROFESSIONAL TYPING ond lope iron- senphon Choice ol type style lustified margin Ca» Anne Zobolio 441-6114 4-13 TRAVEL SKI CO LO RAD O ! Keystone condo staeps 4 or more firepioce Seated pool, snowmobiies. $ie*gH ndev íenruv skating vhops Coll collect (713) 480-91C? 3-26 D O N 7 MISS OUT' Spnrvg Break skwng »n Steamboat Spnngy Colorado for only $198 per person for a week Deluxe ski in/'out condos with athletic club lifts ond porties CALL SUNCHASE TOLL FREE 2 23 TODAY 1 8 0 0 321 5911 LOST & FOUND LOST RING! 2 29 Gold wrih letien LHS 3 - T9 Small sue R ew o rd '4 5 4 -0 7 9 7 . EXPERIENCED TYPIST m North Austin hour (i home Low rates, fast and occurate 8 3 6 4 9 7 1 __________________________ 3 29 RUNNER Needed by very busy commercial real estate ond construction firm to run errands. Approximately 20 hours per week (afternoons preferred). You must have youf own fronspoftation and Hove a good driving record Neat appearance ond rekobtkfy im­ perative $4.00/hour, plus mtleoge. Mai) or deliver resume to THE KUCERA COMPANY Attention: Cord 7320 Mopoc North, #100 Austin, TX 78731 B A N K ER 'S H O U R S P e lic a n 's W h a r f is n o w a c c e p t ­ in g a p p lic a t io n s f o r p a r t t im e m o r n in g f o o d p r e p p e r v P le a s e theses, a p p l y in p e r s o n o n ly , 9 - l l o n i . W R i v o r i i d * WORD PROCESSOR NEEDED Part-time word proceetor needed for downtown law firm. Mu# be dde to ac­ curately type 80-85 w-pjiu, have et toast 3 months expenence as word processor ond one yeor iegd experience. Work hours are 5pm 9pm Salary $5.50 per wed «men t ap p ro x 2 weeks) If you ore mrture, d e ­ pendable and oble to work wflh tide su­ pervision, please send your resume so Dora Valdez. 4 0 0 West 15th Street, Sude 1419, Austin, Texas 78701 DELIVERY DRIVERS W AN TED MR G ATH’S IS N O W H IRING RESPONSIBLE DELIVERY DRIVERS EARN FROM S6-10/H O U R Marry positions are avaiabfe fu» an# port time Starting pay $3 5 0 per hour - commission ♦ tips CALL 45> 8471 OR C O M E BY 1318 Commo La Carta EVENINGS 5 pm -9p m Like to talk on the phones? W h y not m oke m oney at M Set up a p p o in t­ ments at our office N o e x p en en ce necessary Call Erik 459-1182 PART TIME counter help wanted with Jack Brawn Ctooners Riverside location Hours 2-6 30pm M onday Friday and every other Saturday 9-1 C a* Sondi Puentes 0 1 4 5 ' 0 8 9 0 _____________ 2 20 VILLAGE C IN E M A IV now h,rmg port tuns concession, usher $3 35 Tiour Ap­ ply ony time, 2 7 0 0 W Anderson Lane 3 -2 3 EOF SERVICES SERVICES T Y P IN G W O R D PR O C E SS IN G / : * X ERO X 860 •S T O R A G E • R E V IS IO N S A MORE 4 5 4 -1 5 3 2 A m u I * 1 V!* D uv* 20 Y e x n Lr$r»i Ex prevent* 7 Dav • A W eek PHOENIX 4 t ) P f t R T S W O R K S , I N C . WOODS TYPINGS I WORD PROCESSING I ! 472-6302 , 2 2 0 0 G u a d a lu p « ' ( a k t e ) When Y o u * * * It Doot Right | WORD PROCESSING $ 1 .5 0 p e r p a g e S p e c ia liz e : Th esis, D is s e r ta ­ t io n s , M u lt ip le L e tte rs , e tc . R e s u m e s — $ 1 9 . 9 5 50 copies * 6-month storage * Millie * 448-3959 * South * THESIS EXPERT Specializing m RUSH JOBS term papers mesis Aord Processing manuscripts resumes etc O i l MAXINE at 331-0327 K A T H E S Q U IC K T ype d isse rta tio n s , th eses, le g a l a n d p ro fe s s io n a l R e fe re n ce s 2 8 2 - a v a ila b le 15 y e a rs e x p e n e n c e 6 1 3 9 _____________________________________ T Y P IN G BY D E A N N E W o r d p ro c e s s in g $1 5 0 p e r p a g e S p e c ia liz in g m theses, te rm p a p e rs , tra n s e n b m g, d iss e rta tio n s , le g a l. 4 4 7 - 7 2 8 4 P ATTY'S W O R D Proce ssing T erm p a p e rs p r o fe s s io n a l re p o rts d isse rta tio n s Pick up, rush s e rv ic e till m»dn»ght 3 4 5 - 4 2 6 9 na , 4 4 3 - 5 6 1 3 P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IN G ~$1 3 5 / rushes / d is c o u n ts a v a ila b le C a n d a c e . 4 5 1 - 4 8 8 5 M a p e n d s n t r a p * m d ra v t a fc t flo n o f » w B M W a tS o m o M s . E xpert ersftanw n. p e r s o n * «nenD oiv r e a a o m tt e r W e e 512/442-1361 Terry T. Sayther, President 1 5 0 8 F o r t v fe w R o a d A u e ttn , T e x a s 7 8 7 0 4 5 1 2 /4 4 2 - 1 3 6 1 TUTORING TYPING House of flutor e TUTORING TYPING s ANY SUBJECT OVERNIGHT SERVICE < ^ 0 1 482-8048 Lü i Open 7 a.m.-Midnight Sunday 5 p.m -Midnight 819 W. 24th Tn-Towers F ^ t P w l u n g it r U n tS 00 PurcftBi HELP WANTED HELP WANTED i d a y s AVAILABLE DURING THE i i SCHOOL WEEK, YOU CAN EARN TOP I I DOLLARS BY WORKING FOR T O -1 I I DAYS TEMPORARY AS: I a SECRETARY = S • TYPISTS I I • DATA ENTRY I i 346-1440 = • WORD PROCESSORS • RECEPT10MSTS • ACC0UNTMG CLERK • OFFICE CLERK NOFEES 346-1440 I 19 Meal Plan — $485 15 Meal Plan — $432 March 19 thru May 15,1984 South/Riverside North/NW 1 4 1 - 2 2 7 7 4 5 1 -2 2 2 3 4 7 4 -6 3 5 7 8 5 0 1-B B u rn e t Rd. Centr 1/UT S EOE = TEMPORARY ^lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll HUE WANTED 1 0 % d ia c o c n t o n a ll M ' a , Cassette ’ •arsootior -vr* micro &s!C — Quality is our # i priority— 9 5 c P A G E , d o u b le s p a c e d Rushes e x tra 13 y e a rs e x p e n e n c e L o c a te d so u th D o n ­ 17 Days a Week Transportation Provided Apartments, Condos, Duplexes NOW LEASING Furnished & Unfurnished Apts. ANOTHER WORLD 415 W. 39th 1BR 458-3661 RIO GRANDE PENTHOUSE 1801 RIO GRANDE #104 1BR 476-2084 If no answer at above phone nos., call 346-7233 Professional mmtaged try XD Investments, Inc. S to p B y o r CALL fo r m o re Information TODAY! 478-9811 MERLE NORMAN COSMETICS BEAUTY ADVISORS TRAINED AND EXPERIENCED Austin’s newest Merte Norman Cosmetic Studio is opening soon in Barton Creek Square Malt. We have full and part time positions available. This is a career opportunity with advancement possibilities. Must be able to work flexible hours. References required. Paid commissions. Applications available: Merte Norman Cosmetics at 3209 Bee Cave Rd. 327-8225 Ask for PhyHs or Yvette Got A Really Big Appetite... Castilian M eal Plan T h e C a stilia n 2323 San Antonio St. The Daly Texan/Monday, March 19,1984/Paga 19 Detroit overcomes Ryan’s performance United Press International With 16 years in the major leagues, Houston pitcher Nolan Ryan has seen many a spring training come and go. But exhibition season 1984 is proving to be better than most. The right-hander, who was has pitched five no-hitters in his career, retired the first 19 Detroit Tigers Sun­ day. His streak ended when Alan Trammell was safe on an error in the seventh inning in the game at Lake­ land, Fla. Joe Sambito relieved Ryan in the eighth, with the Astros leading 1-0, and was tagged with the loss in Hous­ ton’s 2-1 defeat. Overshadowed by Ryan’s perform­ ance was the job by Jack Morris, who pitched the first seven innings for the Tigers. Morris allowed just two hits and the lone Houston run in the first inning. The score remained 1-0 until the bottom o f the eighth when Lance Parr­ ish greeted Sambito with a leadoff sin­ gle. Parrish moved to third base when Sambito threw wildly to first on a pickoff play. After Kirk Gibson was hit by a pitch, Glenn W ilson tied the score with a sharp single to left. Pinch hitter Barbara Garbey was safe on another error to load the bases. John Wocken- fuss then hit a sacrifice fly for the game-winning RBI. The winner in relief was Pat Lar­ kin. Jerry Ujdur pitched the ninth in­ ning to record a save. The Tigers im­ proved their exhibition record to 5-9. Houston fell to 8-6. In other exhibition games: At Fort Lauderdale, Fla., a quintet o f Texas pitchers combined on a sev­ en-hitter Sunday, helping the Rangers defeat the New York Yankees 5-3. It was the first loss in relief for Dave Righetti. At Bradenton, Fla., outfielder Rup- pert Jones scored the tying run in the fifth inning and later drove in an in­ surance run to lead the Pittsburgh Pi- MAJOR UAOUBS rates to a 6-4 decision over the St. Louis Cardinals. Jones, a non-roster player, was with the San D iego Padres last season before declaring him self a free agent. At West Palm Beach, Fla., infield­ er Brad Mills broke a 1-1 tie in the sixth inning with a two-out, two-nin single which carried the Montreal Ex­ pos to a 4-2 triumph over the Kansas City Royals. Left-hander Chris Welsh pitched three shutout innings to get the victory. At St. Petersburg, Fla., outfielder George Bell drove in five runs with a home run, single and triple to lead the Toronto Blue Jays to an 11-inning, 6- 3 win over the New York Mets. At Winter Haven, Fla., Mickey Hatcher snapped a 2-2 tie with his first homer o f the spring and Rick Lysan- der pitched out o f a ninth-inning jam to lead the Minnesota Twins to a 4-3 victory over the Boston Red Sox. Hatcher’s slammer was only the sec­ ond homer in 12 games for the Twins this spring. At Clearwater, Fla., Len Matuszek collected four hits and drove in four runs and Mike Schmidt blasted his first spring home run as the Philadel­ phia Phillies romped over the Chicago White Sox 8-1. Last year’s Cy Young Award winners John Denny and LaMarr Hoyt matched off against each other — with winner Denny giv­ ing up one run in six innings and Chi­ cago’s Hoyt giving up six runs in just over four innings. spring At Yuma, A riz., Paul Molitor ex­ training hitting tended his streak to nine games to lead the Milwaukee Brewers to a 4-1 win over the San Diego Padres. Molitor hit a pair o f singles to boost his spring av­ erage to .543. He now has 19 hits in 35 at bats. S E A T T L I C O L D i i n n e a p o l S ' S A N F R A N C IS C O 'O EN VI L O S A N G E L E S H IG H E S T T E M P E R A T U R E S / OALLAS h50 160 '70 U PI W E A T H E R F O T O C A S T ® I9TON NEW YORK I T y \ > ' FLOW NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 P.M. CST 3-19-84 The forecast for the Austin area calls for a cool and windy Monday with cloudy skies. The high w ill be in the upper 60s and the low in the upper 40s. Winds w ill be from the northwest at 10 to 15 mph. Tuesday the skies w ill be partly cloudy with the high in the upper 60s. Nationally, the M ississippi and Tennesee valleys and the G ulf Coast Region w ill see some shower activity w hile snow activity will be found in the North Atlantic Coast States. Elsewhere sunny to partly cloudy skies should prevail TO D A Y 'S CRO SSW O RD PUZZLE A C R O S S 1 Festivity 5 After Nasser 10 Date for a guy 14 Biting 15 Higher than 16 Field mouse 17 Popular song 18 Animate 19 Gen. Robert 20 Sioux Indian 21 Cheeky 22 Temper 24 Pause 26 Ice m asses 27 Like: suff. 28 Song and — 31 Renowned 34 House type 35 Dublin-based org. 36 Lifeless 3 7 38 Check 39 "Diamond panky 40 Garment 41 Western lake 42 One of five 44 Demure 45 Snowmobiles 46 Privateer 50 On the beach 52 Bring under control 53 Prior to: pref. 54 Rebuff 55 Uproar 57 Jewel 58 Nudge 59 Finished 60 Chide 61 Stepped on the gas 62 Active: dial. 63 Fruit decay DOW N 1 — Bowl 2 Critical 3 Typesetting machines: colloq. 4 Result: suff. 5 Welcome 6 “— with M e” 7 Pigeon's kin 8 Salutation 9 Drift 10 Get even 11 Jeweler 12 Out of the wind P R E V IO U S P U ZZLE S O L V E D n a a a a a u a u a n a t a aaaaa anua aaaa aaaaa aana uuaa aaaaauaaa aaaaa juaa aaoaaaa aaa aaa uaaa aaaaa aauaaaua aaaa aaaaa auuu naaaanaa aaauu aaaa aaa aua aaaaaaa aaaa aaaaa aaaaauaaa aaaa aaaa uuaua aaaa aaaa aaaaa aaaa aaaa aaaaa 13 Sly look 21 Outer cover 23 Principal 25 Variegated 26 Lenders 28 Italian poet 29 Mars: pref. 30 Roster item 31 Season 32 Zool. suff. 33 Dairy treat 34 Hindu nobles 37 Chronic 38 States 40 Noble 41 Disrupted 43 Ran away 44 Situation — 46 Looked over 47 Dismay: var. 48 Incensed 49 Sublease 50 Reptiles 51 Watery snow 52 Spring or flood 56 United 57 Globe Seattle dominates Golden State United Press International SEATTLE — Gus Williams scored 28 points and handed out 12 assists to lead the Seattle SuperSonics to a 126- 99 drubbing of the Golden State War­ riors. The Sonic guard, who has averaged 25 points and 12.5 assists in his last five games, scored 14 points in the third quarter as Seattle opened up a 19-point lead. It was Seattle's third straight victo­ ry while the Warriors have lost their last four. Joe Barry Carroll led the Warriors with 24 points. Five Sonics scored in double fig­ ures, including Tom Chambers with 15 and Fred Brown with 14. The most important basket, though, was a slam dunk by Scooter McCray at the buzz­ er, giving the Sonics their 126th point and every one o f the 8,586 fans in the Kingdome a free pizza as part o f a special promotion. The fans had been crying “ pizza'’ for the final eight minutes o f the fourth quarter as the Sonics reserves put on an offensive display to reach the magic number of 125. Denver 107, Chicago 104 DENVER — Kiki Vandeweghe scored 15 points in the fourth quarter to spark a late-game rally and lead Denver to victory over Chicago — the eighth straight home-court triumph for the Nuggets. Denver trailed most of the game but finally pulled ahead on free throws by Alex English with 1:26 left. The Denver forward has now made 55 consecutive free throws. two Chicago had a chance to win it in the final seconds but Quintín Dailey traveled with the ball. Denver's Mike Evans then hit two free throws with three seconds to play, and the Bulls' Dave Corzine missed a three-point at­ tempt at the buzzer. Vandeweghe scored 30 points and English had 24. Dan I s s e i had 21, in­ cluding 16 in the first seven m in u te s of the third quarter, but he injured his nght knee and sat out the rest of the game NBA Dailey led Chicago with 19 points and Orlando Wooiridge scored 18. K.C. 108, Cleveland 97 RICHFIELD, Ohio — Mike W ood­ son came o ff the Kansas City bench to score 33 points — 27 in the second half — and rally the Kings to a win over the Cleveland Cavaliers. Cleveland led by 16 points late in the second quarter, but the Kings dominated the second half. They won the third quarter 33-17 and the fourth 30-21. After making 61 percent o f their shots in the first half, the Cavs fin­ ished only 46 percent for the game. Mil. 109, Wash. 101 MILWAUKEE — Marques John­ son scored 25 points to lead the Milwaukee Bucks to a victory over the Washington Bullets. The Bullets played without Jeff Ru- land, the team's leading scorer and re­ bounder, who was sidelined with a sprained ankle. Greg Ballard led the Bullets with 25 points and Tom McMillen added 15 points. Paul Pressey scored 18 points for Milwaukee. The Bullets trailed throughout and five consecutive points by Johnson gave Milwaukee a 65-56 lead with 7:30 left in the third penod. But Washington rallied and closed to 76-74 late in the quarter after two free Johnson. Milwaukee led 80-76 at the end o f the penod. throws by Frank The Bucks put the game away by outsconng Washington 15-2 at the start of the fourth penod to take a 93- 78 lead. Washington never got closer than eight points after that. The Bucks jumped out to an early 19-7 lead, and with Marques Johnson getting 12 of his points in the first quarter they led 30-12 after one peri­ od. Milwaukee still held a 47-39 lead after a dunk by Pressey with 2:36 left in the second period. C leveland’s Lonnie Shelton (I) outleaps Kansas C ity’s LaSalle Thom pson. The Kings beat the C avaliers, handing them their 10th loss in 11 gam es. United Press International Pittsburgh drops Florida St. in NIT, 66-63 United Press International GREENSBORO, N.C — Clyde Vaughan scored 25 points and Pitts­ burgh held off Florida State at the free-throw line Sunday night tor a 66- 63 victory in the second round of the National Invitation Tournament The Panthers scored their last six points at the free throw line, hitting six-of-seven. to subdue a Seminole comeback Pitt, 18-12. capitalized on key er­ rors by Florida State in the closing seconds. Trailing 64-62 with 15 sec­ onds left. Florida State's Vince Mar- tello hit the front end of a one-and-one but missed the second shot and the Panthers came away with the re­ bound. With 13 seconds left, reserve Billy Culbertson hit two free throws to put the game out of reach. Vaughan scored 16 of his points in the first half and George Allen joined him in double figures with 15 points including four crucial free throws in the gam e’s final two minutes. Florida State, which ended it'' sea­ son 20-11. was led b\ Martello with 16 points. Alton G ip son with 12 and Randy Allen with 11 Florida State trailed b \ as many as eight points in the second half, but the Sem inóles fought their way back to tie it 49-49 with 9 :5 0 to play W ith 5:30 left and the score knotted 56-56. Mien scored the g o -a h e a d points and the Panthers never trailed. Pitt also led by eight twice in the first half and was up 33-27 at inter mission The Panthers ju m p e d on top e a r l y . but Florida State fought back and led 14-10 nine m inutes into the game G ip son , Florida S ta te 's leading scorer with a 20.5 average, left the game with five m in utes gone and the Sem in óles trailing 8-4. He returned to the lineup with 7:38 left in the first half, and his team d o w n 20-17. H U P WANTED HELP WANTED HELPWANTED__________ HELP WANTED__________HELP WANTED HELP WANTED PRINTER NEEDED, wiM tram A b o need manoger for bookstore Apply 22 0 0 Guodolupe 6pm-1 lpm weekdays 9am- 3-28 6pm weekends P RESCH OO L TEACHER needed. M-F, 7 30-12 30pm m South Austin program 442-6165, 4 4 3 -8 0 3 3 ____________ 3-21 A S IA N -A M E R IC A N S Eom $4.00 in less fhon one hour by participating m a one time study Wont opinions about counsel­ ing Call Colleen 45 8 -5 0 2 8 evenings for 3-22 detoib. Y M C A needs W Sl experienced with orthopedic aHy hondicopped A b o an aerobics teocner CaM 4 7 6 -6 7 0 5 or 459- 3 ^ 2 1442 M OTHER W H O works at home needs energetic person with sense of humor to help with child core, kght housekeeping 2-3 days weekly Hours flexible W e live near shuttle, city bus route 478-8731.3- STEAK A N D Ale is m need of mature stable and intelligent people to fill a few part time dishwashing and bussing pos tions Appliconts need the willingness and ability to eventually assume a dinner waiter position and the dnve and deter mination to achieve that goal Stop by M F 3-4 30pm, 2211 W Anderson lane for 3-21 an interview pari time 20 hours/ CLERK TYPIST week. Flexible, must type, nonsmoker ex­ cellent atmosphere Must have car IH- 35/183 area Telephone Terry 452- 6 2 2 6 ___________________________3-23 CHIUS RESTAURANT ts hiring waitper- sons for lunch or dinner Apply in person 3-27 7310 Bumet Rood A M ER IC A 'S FAVORITE singing telegrams now hmng talent M aie and female shippers, singers, etc. Up to $25 per act 3 20 47 8-7088 CO U N TY UNE O N THE LAKE looking for mature responsible person to fill day prep, cocktail and host positions Apply ¡n person between 8am 1pm, 346-3664.3- 26 N EED CARRIERS men or women both morning and evening routes Short hours, good income for students Can use hus­ band/ wife team Call Darwin Ellis 454- 3-26 5763 between 2 and 4pm daily TEMPORARY PART time secretary need­ ed Duties include some typing accuracy more important than speed. light bool keeping, and errand running Above skills plus neat appearance required Hours 10am-2pm Late March-approx M ay 1 3-19 S5 00 hour Cali 472 4842 W A N T E D D O O R to door survey re­ search N o soliciting required $4/hour Saturdays Sundays Call 45 9-42 02 3-19 EASTER FLOWER vendors needed now. Cash paid daily Work any days you choose 459-7453. L O O K IN G FOR a fun career that offers unlimited opportunities ond earning po­ tential? Arthur Murray Dance School seeking ambitious men and women to tram as professional dance instructors. N o experience necessory. Full and part hme training program starting soon A p ­ ply 8776-B Research Blvd órand Cen­ tral Station M-F. 2-5pm, 6-8pm N O P H O N E CALLS.__________________ 3-14 N EED PART hme leasing agent. Large in­ ventory of houses, duplexes, apartments. Real Estate license required The Buzbee 3-12 Co 447-6071 S W IM M IN G INSTRUCTOR summer af­ ternoons Experienced W Sl and synchro­ nized Far Northwest Austin, private swim 3-21 school Borbaro Denny 258-3141 r s a s s i 3>$D W iK C f ! WELL LET'S SEE- ' GOT |NP TTOP'lNG PONE- I A L tl06T 60T ARKÉ5T6P,. ¡M RéCoYERJNG FrpH m r - y Q e c ‘n n N - B.C. >K,6 *Jy^ , i v E OOT ¿C O D M p 6AC? MEWS ! THE O coV Mevv^- iG THE ElEH IM POSTS we OCT IBOS. KMav VVAHTS u s to STAoe ^ A WALK-PUT. by jo h n n y hart \ ........ ...... f DTE UMOH w- L. _ J L _/ ( e S WHAT (the Hews]5 J E ? 19 V < P E A N U T S ® by Charles M. Schulz 964 united I e , lute Syndicelr I’*: I * * - ' ’ BLOOM COUNTY by B erk e B reathed m HtiL tVti, SALES CREW M A N A G E R S Good port time evening posi­ tion, M-F, 5-9, and a few hours on Saturday. Must have reliable car or truck. Full time income working with teen-age sales people. Call Ken Reynolds 445- 3759 MR. GATTI'S Wm. Cannon and IH-35 Needs delivery drivers. $6-8/ hour, including wages, commis­ sions ond tips. Full or part time, days or nights. Apply between 2-5pm. SPACE PLAN N ER needed A SA P Tempo rory position designing office spoce Twin Towers Office Pori. Leosmg Office 454- 366) ___________________3-2] EXPERIENCED A N D motivated tutor to supervise bright but disorganized 7th grader with tough curriculum M onday Thursday 4 -6pm Car necessory $5 00/ 3-23 hour 451-46)8 LIFEGUARDS N EED ED for summer at Balcones W ood Club pool Senior li- fesavmg required Send statement of background and qualifications w/ list of 3 references to Becky Kush. 11325 AIKom bro. Austin. TX 7 8 75 9 by March 30 3-23 LOCAL SOFTW ARE company in need of temporary port time hetp Begin tmmedt- atety, flexible hours, contact Cheryl See 3-23 man, BPI Systems (512)454-7191 INSTRUCTIONAL ASSISTAN T M -W 10 hours per week Work with school age children ond odutts Tutoring reodtng and moth skills Education motor Connie 441- 3-21 3 8 9 8 SOUTHSIDE N E W SST A N D now accept­ ing applications for M l and port time clerks. Evening hours. Starting salary J4 0 0 hour Retail experience desired, pofygroph required Coll Charles Jones 3-23 445-9921 between 9-5pm N EE D EXTRA money? Two port time DJs needed for Hyde s Bor & Onll. Flexible hours Coll Clmon at 4 5 3-74 58 or 477- 3-30 5739._______ W F ARE now hiring for the following po­ rtions, flexible hours 6oro 8pm stacker (bus) woitper»on freight clerk (Tuesday, Wednesday and Fnday mornings) Neat appearance, good work history and cur­ rent references required Apply Person­ nel Office 8 30-U 30. 1 30-4 30, M o n ­ day Fnday 60 0 0 Middle Ftskville Rd.3- 21 W A N T E D PH O N E R S for opinion surveys $4/hr Last through Apni Hours negoti­ able between llom-9 30pm 459-4524. ____________________________ 3-23 HELP1 N EE D 100 peopie who wont to lose 5 lbs or more and learn to earn $ while doing tt Write to P O Box D -11. Austin, TX 78712_________________ 3 30 Conscientious, BABYSITTER NEEDED dependable person to core for 15 month old »n my centroity located home approx­ imately one evening weekly. O w n trans­ 3-21 portation preferred 47 6-78 97 TOUR OPERATOR in Northwest Houston needs ful time temporary reservationist for summer Must have good phone and ctencoi skills Type minimum 50wpm. 713- 591-1122________________________3-30 PART TIME tob for sincere person who entoys fabrics and a interested in the cus­ 3-3 0 tom interior business. 45 3 -4 9 6 2 S Y S T E M S / A P P L IC A T IO N S P R O - G R A M M E R Organization consulting firm 4 blocks from UT, for DEC 1123 Plus, RSTS Prefer engineering, computer sci­ ence or moth science motor Need exten­ sive Basic and Pascal experience plus good grodes 15-25 per week. Dr Jerry Roemisch 474-6917.______________3-23 W IN E A N D Spirits shop need you if you □re well reod with a liberal arts bock­ ground. fnendty hetpfu! ond mature and oble to endure some picky detail work. Available for 20 -30 hours/week (even­ ings ond Saturdays), oble to commit your­ self to this tob until Chnsimas Please call 3-23 us at 4 7 2 -0 4 6 9 Ham-9pm FEMALE STUDENT to babysit 4 year old occasional evenings. Must have transpor­ tation Northwest Austin Michele: 34 5 3219.___________________________ 3-23 W AITPEO PIE N EED ED for lunch shift Ideal for students who have little spare time but still need extra money Stop by at Steak & Ale, 2211 W Anderson Ln. 3-21 between 3-4 30pm, M -F A D M IR A L FENCE Company: Soles per­ son needed to estimate and sell fencing to residential ond commercial customers. Excellent potential for full or part lime work. Call 255-4626. WKI train. BABYSITTER W A N T E D for infant in my home 3 half days a week. Hours flexible. Light housekeeping desired, but not nec­ essary. Central Austin location. Referenc­ 3-23 es required. 4 5 9-70 04 3-23 ______ _____________________________ N EE D P ER SO N with cor for housekeep- BUS PER SO N needed immediately, mg one day o week Enfield area Coll G ood pay, good lips Coll 346-3112 after 4 7 7-07 02 3-27 2 30. Ask for Mike. Tokyo Steak House. ligion ipeech speei ress press pre fly assem blyi idress redj fgion ?ch spi press issembl I ress red] Religion reí >eech speet! iss press pré assemble A free press: Your key to freedom. Pac a 20/The Daffy Taxan/Monday, March 19,1964 Oilers tie scoring record, top Sabres with late goals United Press International EDMONTON, Alberta — Mark Messier tied the score early in the third period then scored the game- winner with 2:50 left Sunday night to power the Edmonton Oilers to a 4-3 victory over Buffalo, snapping the Sabres’ five-game winning streak. Messier’s game winner was also the 424th goal of the season for the Oilers, tying them with the NHL team scoring record they set last season. With the score tied 3-3, the Oiler center worked his way to the right of goaltender Tom Barrasso, took a pass from Dave Lumley and fired the puck to the far side of the net at 17:10 for his 35th goal. He had tied the score at 2:22 of the period, pivoting in front of the net and shooting the puck into the left side. The Sabres’ 20-year-old Phil Housely scored one goal to become the youngest defenseman in NHL his­ tory to score 30 goals. The previous record was held by Hall of Famer Bobby O n , who scored his 30th two days after his 22nd birthday. Hartford 5, N.Y. Isles 4 HARTFORD, Conn. — Mark Johnson’s second goal of the game at 12:20 of the third period snapped a 4- 4 tie and lifted the Hartford Whalers to a triumph over the New York Islan­ ders. Sylvain Turgeon centered to John­ son, who beat Roland Meianson with a three-foot slapshot for his 34th goal. Randy Pierce scored his second goal of the game 26 seconds prior to John­ son’s goal when he caught Meianson NHL out of position and scored on a back­ hander to knot the score at 4-4. Bill Smith replaced Meianson with 1:53 left and was pulled with 47 sec­ onds remaining, but the Islanders could not get the equalizer. It was the second victory for Hart­ ford in three games against the four­ time Stanley Cup champions and pre­ vented from being eliminated from the playoffs. St. Louis 5, Wash. 3 the Whalers LANDOVER, Md. — Brian Sutter scored a shorthanded goal in the third period to lead the the St. Louis Blues to a victory over Washington, snapp­ ing the Capitals’ eight-game unbeaten streak. The Blues’ victory prevented Washington from moving into first place in the Patrick Division as Hart­ ford defeated first-place New the York Islanders 5-4. Washington re­ mains one point behind the Islanders, after giving up five goals for the first time since a loss to Philadelphia Dec. 26. The Blues remain in second place in the Norris division, four points ahead of Detroit. Calgary 4, Winnipeg 3 WINNIPEG, Manitoba — Doug Risebrough scored a third-period goal to defuse a stubborn Winnipeg come­ back and lead the Calgary Flames to a triumph over the Jets. With the Flames holding a 3-1 edge, Risebrough fired a screened shot to the far side of the Winnipeg net at 9:35 of the period to score the game-winner and render a three-goal surge by the Jets in the third-period harmless. The victory put nine points between the second-place Flames and the third- place Jets in the race for playoff posi­ tions in the Smythe Division. Quebec 5, Minn. 5 BLOOMINGTON, Minn. — Peter Stastny’s goal with 2:48 to play lifted the Quebec Nordiques to a tie with the Minnesota North Stars. For the North Stars, the tie extend­ to eight their unbeaten streak ed games. Steve Payne had two goals and an assist for Minnesota, with Mark Na­ pier adding three assists. Brian Law­ ton opened the scoring for Minnesota at 2:04 of the first period on a feed from Napier. Jean-Francois Sauve tied the score for the Nordiques with a 20- footer at 9:55 and Tony McKegney pushed a rebound past Minnesota goalie Don Beaupre to give Quebec a 2-1 lead at 12:08. Gordie Roberts tied the score for Minnesota on a shorthanded breaka­ way at 17:59, but the Nordiques ahead 55 seconds later on Anton Stastny’s power-play goal. Payne made it 3-3 on a power play at 2:03 of the second period. Nor­ diques center Paul Gillis was given credit for a goal at 5:30 that actually was batted into the Minnesota net by North Star defenseman Curt Giles. Payne tied it again at 7:08. (( Public Lecture DR. THOMAS GOLD Astronomer-Physicist on CARBON FROM THE INTERIOR OF THE EARTH Monday, March 19,1984 4:00 p.m. RLM Hall 4.102 Dr. Gold is world renown foe his originally controversial and now accepted theories of the mechanism of pulsations, neutron stars and speculations on the direction of the arrow of time. His speculation on primordial deep gas pockets is contrary to the expectation of conventional geology but he presents these views forcefully enough that geoscientists have been forced to re­ examine the basis of their current understanding. Dr. Gold has been invited to speak as part of the Jane and Roland Blumberg Centennial Professorship in Planetary Sciences, established to support the study of the processes of the formation of the Earth, particularly questions related to the origin and distribution of elements. Two other more technical talks with be: PULSAR MAGNETO SPHERES AND THE SOURCE OF PULSAR RADIATION Dept, of Astronomy, 4:00 p.m., RLM 15.216B, Tuesday EVIDENCE FOR MANTLE HYDROCABON Dept, of Geological Sciences, G E 0 100,12:00 Noon, Wednesday JJ SPONSORED BY THE COLLEGE OF NATURAL SCIENCES SPRING ’84 HOUSING GUIDE r Once again The Dolly Texan is publishing its an-1 nual Housing Guide Supplement. This year the Housing Guide will be inserted as a broadsheet section to the daily newspaper and will otter con­ sumer tips on decorating apartments & dorms, j> tenants rights and also suggestions on iinding the s perfect place for those searching tor a place to live. So it you're in the market tor an apartment, condo or dorm, look tor the Housing Guide on | MARCH 28. Space Reservation Deadline Publication Date March 20 E March 28 Settled Field helps tennis team to three West Coast victories By JEFF CAVALLIN Daily Texan Staff Robyn Field, Kathleen Cummings and Cleverly Bowes propelled the women’s tennis Longhorns to three consecutive dual match wins in Cali­ fornia last week. Texas, 17-5, finished its 3-1 road trip last Tuesday with a 6-3 win over defending NCAA champion Southern California. The victory over the No. 7 Trojans followed an 8-1 trouncing of Cal-Santa Barbara and a 6-3 win over the 15th-ranked California Golden Bears. The only loss of the trip was to Pep- perdine, 5-4, and could have gone ei­ ther way, Texas assistant coach Bob Haugen said. In the three wins, Field, Cummings and Bowes, the top three seeds, were all 3-0, and the doubles teams of Bowes-Becky Callan and Cummings- Field also went undefeated. The knockout of USC was especial­ ly sweet for No. 6 Texas. “ I knew it was a great match, espe­ cially when it was over and I realized we had just won a big m atch,” Field said. “ It was a really successful trip.” Field, an 18-year-old from Durban, South Africa, said she finally feels comfortable playing NCAA tennis and that lately the pressure has been “ no big deal.” Ex-Longhorn Kevin Curren, also from South Africa, recommended Texas recruit Field. Coach Jeff Moore knew she would be well worth one of the eight scholarships the women’s tennis team awards. Since she arrived in January, Field has had a huge adjustment to make. She is still in her first semester at Tex­ as, but she has caught on quickly and is how making a big contribution to the team. “ I feel much better every time I play,” Field said. That became apparent in California, where she didn’t lose a set in either singles or in doubles as Cummings’ partner. Field said she enjoyed the time off she had out west. “ We got two days off in California,” she said. “ It was pretty tiring, but Jeff (Moore) let us go to the beach.” All the fun ends on Tuesday, how­ ever, when Texas resumes practices in preparation for the crux of the South­ west Conference season. The Long­ horns take on Lamar at 2 p.m . Thurs­ day and Rice at 11 a.m. Saturday. Both matches are at Penick-Allison Courts. Spill typifies UT’s indoor finish By ROBERT BRUCE Daily Texan Staff It was a weekend when little seemed to go right for the Texas wom­ en’s track team. The Longhorns ar­ rived in Syracuse, N .Y ., with quali­ fiers in five events at the NCAA National Indoor Championships, held March 9-10. They left with a respectable, but somewhat disappointing 17th place finish — and a very bruised Terri Turner. “ Basically, it was a little disap­ pointing,” said assistant coach Teri Jordan. “ Had we finished the (1,600- and 3,200-meter) relays as we should have, we would have definite­ ly been fourth.” in Tara Arnold provided Texas with all eight of its points by finishing sec­ ond in the 1,000-meter run with a time of 2:46.41. The relay teams did not fare as well. In the 1,600-meter relay, Turner, running the final leg, was knocked down during the baton exchange by Rice’s Laura Choppa. The collision was ruled accidental. Although Turner got back up to finish the run, the relay team finished with a time of 3:49.30, which did not qualify it for the next heat. “ I don’t know how she even got up,” Jordan said. “ She made a desparate attempt to catch up, but Ad­ renalin can only carry you so far after a fall.” The Longhorns’ 3,200-meter relay team was also eliminated in the prel­ iminaries, when Virginia squeezed by at time of 8:50.68 was only a few tenths of a second away from qualifying for the finals. Arnold ran the anchor leg, tape. Texas’ the final cro ssed th e finish line w ith h e r legs ahead o f the V irg in a a n ch o r ru n n e r, but not h e r ch est. “ It w as ju s t sad the w ay th in g s h a p ­ pen ed , bein g o u tlean ed an d b e in g trip p e d ,” Jo rd a n said. In the 5 5 -m eter d a sh , T eri S m ajstr- la ’s run o f 6 .9 8 q u a lified h e r fo r the sem ifinal h e at, but her h a m strin g s tightened in the sem ifinal run and she fin ish ed w ith a tim e o f 7 .0 6 . T u rn er fin ish ed fourth in her p re ­ lim inary 5 0 0 -m eter run w ith a tim e o f 7 4 .0 4 . A rnold said the team w as not too the up co m in g d isap p o in ted because o u td o o r season is m ore im portant “ N o b o d y ’s really ready fo r it (the indoor ch am p io n sh ip s) p e a k w is e ,” she said. “ If you d o g o o d , g reat. If no t, th e re ’s alw ay s the rest o f the se a ­ s o n .” ATTENTION August and December Grads Electrical Engineers Computer Scientists Mathematicians Physicists The National Security Agency has professional ortunities for you and will he recruiting on campus in the nearmture. Electrical Engineers: Work with a team of dedicated professionals developing advanced communication security and foreign signals intelligence collection and processing systems. From antenna and receiver under computer control through sophisticated soft­ ware demodulation and worldwide intercomputer networks into advanced analytic databases. Specialize in depth, or span the complete range of exotic electronic information technology from propagation medium to target analyst. RF, microwave, millimeter wave, and op­ tical system development; complete microelectronic design, fabrication, packaging, and test facilities. Opportunities ranging from fun damental research through advanced development, small to large system design and prototype development, developmental test and evaluation, field installation, and operational support. Unparalleled variety, challenge, and internal mobility for maximum professional development and satisfaction. Computer Scientists: Our computer scientists work with electrical engineers and mathematicians across the frontier of finite state machine development and applications. Microprocessor applications, massively parallel architecture development, hyperfast numeric algorithm development, unique bit-slice based subsystem applications, knowledge-based systems, and every language from microprocessor machine code through Ada. Mathematicians: Cryptography and cryptanalysis offer exceptionally rich professional opportunities for pure and applied mathematicians with the added feature of critical service to national security. Many additional opportunities in operations research, traffic analysis, signal analysis, speech processing, network modelling, system performance assessment and analysis, and inter­ disciplinary team assignments with electrical engineers and computer scientists Physicists: Exceptional opportunities in all electronics-related physical disciplines, including electromagnetic theory, cryogenics and superconductivity, acoustics, electrical properties of materials, ferromagnetism, coherent optics, surface phenomena, ionizing radiation effects on components (nuclear hardening), submicron integrated circuit device interactions, and femptosecond optical pulse technology, to name a few. Entry positions are located in suburban Mary MM, midway between Washington, DC. and Baltimore, MD. Salaries are competitive with private industry and full Federal fringe benefits apply. U.S. citizenship is required. Additional information can be obtained from your Career Placement Center or through your University chapter of the IEEE. There will be a briefing for interested students on Wednesday, March 21, in ECJ 1.202, at 5:00 PM. Interviews will be conducted in the engineering placement center on Thursday, March 22. ■ I ? The Daily Texan National Security Agency An Equal Opportunity Employer ¥?■ SÁ&Jt ' .ytf Y&/U -FftL m Shamrock shakes are here again. Tis the first green of spring. Sure as there’re Irish, you’ll love our one-of-a-kind, frosty green, rich ’n thick Shamrock shakes. Just like a refreshing Dublin breeze, ’tis the first green of spring. Iv’’ ’’ -jí, , ,, A i f Offer good only at 2021 Guadalupe (Dobie Mall) Offer valid thru March 25, 1984. McDonalds r\ f \ &you»l V \ V‘v>, Sk.i «T# •• u ; / M | 'ájS eBB SMB [ ’ ■■ ■r _-ijjrr M < •* m L M l B e e r *m¿WSmL JML& iL-á mmZSti « 1 ■ 11# \ * L l i í S v H B v V » - v JL The Daily Texan Features Magazine Monday, March 19,1984 B - E - C - K - E - T - T The writer and his works: a week of performance and debate MARCELl IMARCEAU March 25 B' - . - v j . J 3 p m Perfomina Arts Center Far East Cultures Week Sunday. March 18-Saturday, March 24 “Laotian Textile and Embroidery Exhibit" Union Art GaHery Wednesday. March 21 11:00 am "Japanese Flower Arranging" by Mitsuko Hiraizumi, Texas Union Art Gallery 11:00 am “Slide Presentation" on Far East Society" Sinclair Room, Texas Union 11:45 am "Chinese New Year's Parade" West Mall 12:15 pm "Martial Arts Demonstration" by UT Kendo. Noon Shotokan Karate. Cuong Nyu and Judo Clubs, West Plaza of Tower Bldg. BALLROOM LUNCH featuring Chicken Chow Mein, Texas Union Ballroom 3:0 0 pm "Lecture of Hong Kong-British Relations", Sinclair Room, Texas Union 6 :0 0 pm "Sanjuro", Hogg Auditorium/Theatre Thursday, March 22 Noon BALLROOM LUNCH featuring Sweet and Sour Pork, Texas Union Ballroom 12:30 pm "Women's Concert Choir Performing Japanese Music: Classical, Pop and Traditional" Texas Union Ballroom 1:30 pm "Chinese Calligraphy" by Pao-Hwa Lin, Texas Union Art Gallery 2:0 0 pm "Asian Assimilation: Immigrants Discuss Problems Faced in America" Governor's Room. Texas Union 3:00 pm "Lecture on Buddism Sinclair Room, 4 :0 0 pm “Opium Wars" Texas Union Theatre 7:45 pm 7:00 pm "Audio-Visual Presentation on Singapore" Texas Union Burdine 106 a p r o d u c t io n Curtain C a ll- The Texas Union Theatre Committee is sponsor- of ing “ The Elephant Man” to run in the Texas Union Ballroom Fri­ day and Saturday at 8 pm. Tickets are $4.50 for students and $6.50 for the public. An Apple With A Byte -A pple is offering Macintosh microcomputers for $1,111 through the Texas Union. Demonstrations will be held the Presidential Lounge, Union third floor, from 9 am-l:30 pm and 2:30-5:30 pm Wednesday-Friday. in That’s Entertainment- Darden Smith will be at the Cactus Cafe Friday for a 9:30 p m -1:30 am show. There will be no cover charge. - —__— __ - —— - - . . * r * * \ Tues: 2 for 1 Mixed Drinks Wed: Poetry Reading, 8-10:30 pm 2 for 1 Margaritas Thur: The Ramblers, 9 pm-12 am Fri: Sat: No Cover Darden Smith w/Special Guest 9:30 pm-1 am No Cover Part Time Help, 9:30 pm-1 am Mon: All Pitchers, $2.50, 8 pm-close Tues: Salsa Night, 9 pm-close 2 for 1 Margaritas Wed: Belly Dancing w/Mirage, 7:30-8:30 pm Rock-N-Soul Night, 9 pm-close 2 for 1 Mixed Drinks Thur: Soul Night, 10 pm-close Fri: All Pitchers $2.50, 8-10 pm Housewives Choice, 9:30 pm-close No Cover Sat: Omar & The Howlers, 9:30 pm-close Sun: $1 UT ID/S2 Public 2 for 1 Mixed Drinks, 8 pm-close diversions theater The Comedy Workshop will showcase Franklyn Ajaye John McDonnell and Steven Pearl through Sunday at the Workshop. 15th and Lavaca streets Though primarily a stand- up comic, Ajaye has appeared in several mov­ ies including Car Wash The Jazz Singer and “Stir Crazy 1 The show starts at 8 30 p m . with an additional 1 1 p m show on Friday and Saturday “My Sister In This House,” a play based on a famous French murder case from the 1930s, will play at 8 p m Wednesdays through Satur­ days and at 2 15 p.m Sundays at Zachary Scott Theatre Center Call 476-0591 for reser­ vations and ticket information music “Blues in the Night,” a musical revue cele­ brating America's blues heritage and starring Della Reese, will be performed at 8 p m Mon­ day in the Performing Arts Center Call 471- 1 4 4 4 for more information The Faculty Artists Series continues with Barbara Honn, soprano, and David Garvey on piano at 8 p.m Monday in Recital Hall West. 21st Street and Whitis Avenue. Admission is free Secret Six will play Tuesday at Steamboat 1874, 403 E Sixth S t, and Thursday with Ran­ dom Culture at 6th Street Live. 222 E Sixth St Call 478-2912 for show time and ticket prices The Guest Artists Series will showcase Mitchell Gershenfeld on tuba at 8 p.m. Tues­ day in Bates Recital Hall. 25th Street and East Campus Drive. It's free Beethoven Sonata Festival, featuring the students of UT faculty artist Nancy Garrett, will be held at 8 p m. Tuesday, Friday and Sunday in Recital Hall West 21st Street and Whitis Av­ enue Admission is free UT la77 Lab Band will perform at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Bates Recital Hall Admission is free Ernie Sky and the K-Tels will play Wednes­ day at Hut's Diner, 418 E Sixth St Call 477- 6304 for more information. Marcia Ball Band will play Thursday at An- tone s, 2915 Guadalupe St Call 474-5314 for more information University Student Chamber Music will per form at 8 p m Friday in Bates Recital Hall. Admission is free Clifton Chenier and His Red-Hot Louisiana Band will play Friday and Saturday at An- tone's, 2915 Guadalupe St Call 474-5314 for more information UT Chamber Music Society, in a music scholarship benefit recital coordinated by Paul Olefsky, will perform at 8 p.m Saturday in Bates Recital Hall Tickets are $5 (public), $3 (students) and $15 (patrons). Takiy Orqu, a group that performs music of the Andes and Latin America, will perform at 8 p m Sunday at the Hyde Park Showplace, 511 W 43rd St Call 444-9766 for more informa­ tion art An exhibition of drawings and paintings by Gustav Likan, the internationally famous artist from Yugoslavia, and his son Michael Likan will open Friday at the Concord Gallery, 601 Vi? Martin Luther King Jr Blvd. The opening re­ ception will be from 7 to 10 p.m The artists will discuss their works in a presentation at 7 30 p.m. April 11. “For the Record: The Barker Center Sound Archives,” takes a trip through Texas history in an exhibit of the center's audio archives The exhibit showcases many historical events, including the 1952 Texas Democratic conven­ tion debate between Maury Maverick and Al­ lan Shivers concerning delegates to the na­ tional convention. One portion of the exhibit salutes Texas music. Among the artists fea­ tured are Jams Joplin, Willie Nelson and Bud­ dy Holly. "For the Record” will be on display through Aug 31 at the Barker History Center, in Unit 2 of Sid Richardson Hall, adjacent to the LBJ Library. It is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Patterns, an exhibition that explores the use of patterning in contemporary art from Texas collections, is on display through April 8 at the Laguna Gloria Art Museum. specials The Ruth F. Stephan Poetry Readings con tmues with a presentation by Harryette Mullen at 12:15 p.m. Monday in Academic Center 344 Mullen, the author of "Tree Tall Women,” was a Dobie Paisano fellow in 1981 “Carbon From the Interior of the Earth,” a lecture by Thomas Gold, a Cornell University scientist, will be presented at 4 p.m. Monday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 4.102. Gold, who has greatly stimulated scientific debate with his ideas about the universe, the moon and the earth, will discuss the topics of the Monday lecture in more technical terms during an as­ tronomy colloquium titled "Pulsar Magneto Spheres and the Source of Pulsar Radiation" at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 15.216B and during a seminar in geological sciences titled "Evidence for Mantle Hydrocar­ bon” at noon Wednesday in Geology Building 100 “Civil Rights in U.S. Society,” a lecture by Morris Abram, chairman of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, will be given at 3 p.m. Tuesday in the Charles I. Francis auditorium in Townes Hall. “Mass Media and Social Change: The Peru­ vian Experience” is the topic of a symposium at 1 p.m Tuesday in the Knopf Room of the Academic Center. Guest speakers and their topics include German Carnero-Roque, direc­ tor of a Latin American news agency, “ Latin America’s Role in the New World Information Order"; Helan Jaworksi, Peruvian journalist and mass media scholar, “ Peruvian Mass Me­ dia Reform and Public Participation” ; and Juan Gargurvevich, Peruvian journalist and media scholar, "Mass Media in Peru: Products of History.” “Moving Toward Androgyny: The Gender/ Political Principle in Elsa Morante’s Fiction, ” a lecture by Teresa McKenna, visiting scholar from the University of Southern California, will be presented from 3:30 to 5 p.m. Thursday in Batts Hall 201. “Unwaged,” a gathering of artists, perform­ ers and musicians, will feature an exhibition of paintings, sculptures, photography and street art at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday at Voltaire’s, Big Country contest still seeking entries There’s still time to enter the Big Country contest, which was first announced in the March 5 Images. Because spring break interrupted the flow of entries, we've decided to extend the deadline to noon Wednesday to give more people a chance. The winner will receive two tickets to the band's concert Thursday at the Austin Opry House. In last week's Images, we printed the questions we would’ve asked Big Country had it ever granted us an interview (which it didn't). Your job is to answer those ques­ tions as humorously as possible. Think parody. If you no longer have the March 5 Images, stop by the Texan office at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue and we'll give you a copy of the questions. 405 Lavaca St. Performances will include po­ etry readings and experimental films. The pro­ gram will also be held March 30 and 31 The Shark Dance Company and Houston dancer/choreographer Fane* Dyde will per­ form in a program entitled "Dance Marathon” at 8 p.m. Saturday in the Performing Arts Cen­ ter. Call 471-1444 for ticket information. Marcel Marc *u , the world's greatest mime, will perform his silent art at 3 p.m. Sunday in the Performing Arts Center Call 471-1444 for ticket information. uw h a t A cueAP PAert. ivu/nAnoN co r i AMP A p p e tite s . A MIENTO STUPP£P ^ M IN T H ^ &OTTOM OF THE NOT An A P p F T iz £ £ . // Sunday television 700 0 ® NATURE “Resurrection At Truk Lagoon” Sunken Japanese war machinery destroyed by the AlUes during World War II In the South Pacific provides an environment for the underwater plant and animal life that is examined in this fNm. g , © HARDCASTUE * MCCORMICK Mark and the judge investigate a video dating service for the wealthy that threatens the lives of its customers, g ® MOVIE A A “Old Bam Dance” (1938) Gene Autry. ® BY DESIGN Guest: fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld. ® YE8HUA "The Land And The Promise” Dr. Oswald Hoffman guides us through a dose look at the Roman province, Yeshua, where Jesus was bom. (Part 1 of 5) f f i CD MOVIE A A "The Bedford Incident” (1965) Richard Widmark, Sidney Poitler. @ NBA BASKETBALL New York Knicks at New Jersey Nets (Subject to blackout) 71» © A TALE OF TWO SEASONS An inside look at the rise and fall of the 1983 Atlanta Braves season that began with high hopes and ended in a downhill slide. O O f f i ® MOVIE "Time Bom b" (Premiere) Morgan Fairchild, Joseph Bottoms. Q O d ) IE) THE JEFFERSON8 Ralph's liveli­ hood as a doorman is threatened when the building owner announces he will install an automatic door opener. B e d ) M OVE A A A H "A lie n " (1979) Tom Skerrttt, Yaphet Kotto. © DRAGNET Friday and Gannon must recov­ er $100,000 worth of fine furs stolen from an exclusive department store. ® THE COLLECTION The lives of four people are plagued with jealousy, suspicion and vengefulness. @ MOVIE “Un Mulato Llamado M artin" (No Date) Rene Munoz, Julio Aleman. 8:30 O O CD 8 9 ALICE Vera is Injured while trying to rescue a family of blue jays nesting in the Mel’s Diner sign. ® FIRE ON THE MOUNTAIN Guests: Jethro Bum s and Red Rector, Bill Monroe. ® DRAGNET Friday and Gannon enlist the help of a forensic chemist when two pedestri­ ans are killed by a motorist. 900 0 0 1 0 9 TRAPPER JOHN, M.D. Shoop feels guilty for rejecting Dr. Macey’s marriage proposal when she learns he is terminally ill. 8 9 ® MASTERPIECE THEATRE “The Tale Of Beatrix Potter" The life of Beatrix Potter is traced from her quiet childhood with her pets to the publication of her first book, "The Tale of Peter Rabbit." (Part 1 of 2 ) g ® THAT’S COUNTRY Guest: Laurel Lee. © YOU: MAGAZINE FOR WOMEN Featured: A 32-year-old giftware buyer and freelance graphic artist from Ridgewood, N.J., receives a makeover. (R) | © ENTERTAINMENT THIS WEEK Fea­ tured: Latino singing group Menudo. *20 ® OSCAR REMEMBERED Maxim Mazumdar stars in this one-man play about the notorious playwright Oscar WHde. *30 ® OVATION "Seven Canadian Dance Compa­ nies" A look at Canada's burgeoning dance industry, including the National Ballet of Cana­ da and the Winnipeg Contemporary Dancers: "Tchiakovsky's Overtue to Romeo And Juliet" Lorin Maazei s conducting debut with the Munich Philharmonic: “Arlanna Stassino- poulos” An interview with the internationally known writer. @ NFL’S GREATEST MOMENTS "N FL Sym - funny" (R) *46 @ PEDRO VARGAS "Homenaje Del 50 Aniversario” del muy famoso Pedro Vargas, la leyenda viviente de la canción romántica lati­ noamericana. 1*00 (D © THE MAKING OF PRIVATES ON PARADE A behind-the-scenes look at the film­ ing of the comedy movie "Privates On Parade" which stars John Cleese. ® MOVIE A A "O ld Bam Dance" (1938) Gene Autry. ffl CD THE HONEYMOONERS When Ralph has to learn how to play golf so that he can join his boss in a foursome, he resorts to having Norton teach him. 1*30 G THE JEFFER80N8 Louise has a strange reaction to a visit from her long-lost sister, g O © SOLID GOLD Host: Marilyn McCoo. Guests: Shalamar, The Pretenders, Tracy Ulman, Culture Club, Stevie Nicks, Paul Young; also, a Hall & Oates video. 89 © MONTY PYTHON’8 FLYING CIRCU8 Captain Biggies is given a new look-at, scaling the Uxbridge Road, a report on storage jars, and M ouse bender's quest for cheese. (R) I S I.R.S.’S "THE CUTTING EDGE" Featured: 38 ImogM Monday, March 19,1984 Plus Plus You News News News News News SUNDAY AFTERNOON 1:00 1:30 O White Shadow SportsWorkj o NCAA Basketball Doubieheader: Midwest and West Regional Finals Cont'd 2:00 2:30 3:00 Sportsman USFL Football G © NCAA Basket t»all Doubieheader Midwest and West Regional Finals Cont'd 0 NCAA Basketball Doubleheader: Midwest and West Regional Finals Cont’d 0 David Brinkley USFL Football GCD Firing Une Your Tax Return War Powers 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 LPGA Golf: Women’s Kemper Open News News NBC News First Camera Newscope 60 Minutes News Jrnl. NBC News Fame Close-Up News 60 Minutes Your Business CBS News 60 Minutes Bill Moyers New Tech Making Micro Nova 25 Yrs. News ABC News Ripley’s Believe It Or Not LPGA Golf: Women’s Kemper Open Round Cero Para Gente Grande ABC News The Muppets Ripley’s Believe It Or Not News NBC News First Camera Y Debates El Maleficio Gioconda Movie: "Sky Heist" Movie: “Ensign Pulver" Battlestar Galactica The Mountain That’s Country The Mountain That’s Country Wraparound Country Wraparound Country Plus Plus Tommy Hunter Tommy Hunter Bewitched Alfred Hitchcock Presents Movie: “Ninja Exterminator" Sp. Delivery Livewire Tom. People Mr. Wizard Reggie Jackson Video Disc Jockeys Video Disc Jockeys Wagon Train Movie: “Rainbow Over Texas" Movie: "Daddy Long Legs" Flying House Movie XETU Pedro Vargas Movie: "Variedades De Media Noche" La Señora Basebal: Pre-Season Game Cont'd High Chaparral Jacques Cousteau Animals Wrestling NBA Basketball: Celtics at 76ers Cont’d College Hockey: NCAA Division 1 Championship SportsCenter G(2) Sportsman USFL Football G ® Boat Cont'd SportsWorld G ® Movie: "La Loba" G ® Movie Cont'd fl3) (T$ Movie: “Old Bam Dance" 10 Movie: "Old Bam Dance" (T7) Unexpected Going Great Video Disc Jockeys ® 0 (5D Movie: "Brimstone” Fútbol Cont’d Unexpected Ovation The Odds Special Delivery SUNDAY EVENING 7:00 O Knight Rider o o G© S. Pleshette Knight Rider S. Pleshette 0 0 G © Nature 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 WKRP Entertainment This Week The Statler Brothers Domestic Life The Jeffersons Alice Trapper John, M.D. The Jeffersons Quincy Six Million DolliirMan Movie: 'Time Bomb" Movie: "Time Bomb" Country Music Wrestling Rex Humbard World Of Faith Domestic Life The Jeffersons Alice Trapper John, M.D. Solid Gold Dance Fever News Austin S. Pleshette Domestic Life The Jeffersons Alice Trapper John, M.D. CBS News How The West Was Won Hollywood Hardcastle & McCormick Movie: "Alien” News Movie: "Voyage Of The Damned" AH Creatures Great And Small Masterpiece Theatre Privates Monty Python Soundstage News Benny Hill Movie. "The Mechanic” News Sunday Night Movie: "The Gypsy Moths” Rolando Barral La Sonrisa De La Gioconda Entertainment This Week Honeymooners The Rockford Files How The West Was Won G © Hardcastle & McCormick Movie: “Alien” G ® Knight Rider Movie: "Time Bomb" G O Gioconda Siempre En Domingo G ® Movie: "The Bedford Incident” 03) (5) Movie: "Old Bam Dance" Movie: "Old Bam Dance" The Mountain That’s Country Movie: “Old Barn Dance” The Mountain That's Country Movie: "Old Barn Dance" Dragnet Dragnet You Ovation OleOpry Tommy Hunter OleOpry Tommy Hunter Serendipity Countdown '84 Player The Collection Oscar Remembered The Collection Remembered Video Disc Jockeys Liner Notes I.R.S.'sThe Cutting Edge Video Disc Jockeys In Touch Ben Haden Rock Church Proclaims Contact Larry Jones John Osteen Zola Levitt Jewish Voice Movie: "Un Mulato Llamado Martin” Pedro Vargas Movie: "El Giro, El Pinto Y El Colorado" Movie 0 07) Movie Cont'd 0® By Design 0 VOT) Yeshua <2) Movie Cont'd Video Disc Jockeys © A Tale Of Two Seasons Week In Review & NBA Basketball. New York Knicks at New Jersey Nets Sports Page Oral Roberts Jerry Falwell Open Up | Children's Fund NFL Moments SportsCenter NBA Basketball Boston Celtics at Philadelphia 76ers Black Uhuru in concert; a premiere of the new R.E.M. video, "Sputhern Central Rain "; an exclusive interview with Lone Justice. CB © THE RO CKFO RD FILES While investi­ gating the hazing death of a young college friend. Rockford uncovers a second homicide involving an Arab student from a wealthy fami­ ly 10:46 I s M O VIE “El Giro, El Pinto Y El Colorado" (No Date) Andres Garcia, Rosa Gloria Chagoy- an. 11.-00 O ENTERTAINMENT TH I8 W EEK Featured Latino singing group Menudo, sitcoms getting ( 0 * © 80U N 06T A Q E "Full Swing" Lorraine Feather, Charlotte Crossley and Steve March recreate the vitality and romance of the swing era music with today's technology and style ( B MOVtE A A A "Voyage Of The Damned" (1976) Faye Dunaway. Oskar Werner ffi ffi BENNY HILL Benny goes undercover as a sanitary inspector. ffi ® M O VIE A * H “The Gypsy Moths" (1969) Burt Lancaster, Deborah Kerr ® THE CO LLECTIO N The lives of four people are plagued with jealousy, suspicion and vengefulness. Q NBA BA SK ET BA LL Boston Celtics at Phila­ delphia 76ers(R) 11:30 O © DANCE FEVER Celebrity judges Roger E Mosley, Fred Travalena, Jacklyn Zeman Guest Johnny Gill CD © M O VIE A WVi "The Mechanic” (1972) Charles Bronson, Jan-Michae! Vincent ® BAC K ST A G E AT THE G RAN D O LE O PRY Guests Roger Miller, Billy Walker, Stonewall Jackson. 12:00 Q ANOTHER EVENING WITH THE STATLER BRO THERS: HERO ES. LEG EN D S 6 FRIEN DS The Brothers' attempt at writing a TV show is the springboard for a series of musical sketch­ es including Reba Mclntire on horseback, a tribute to the song "Elizabeth," a gospel sing with the M asters V and a Western operetta featuring Mel Tiliis as a stuttering sheriff G SIX M ILLIO N DO LLAR M AN Steve investi­ gates a plot by waterfront sm ugglers to crack the secrets of the governm ent's defense sys­ tem. ® TO M M Y HUNTER Guests Roy Acutf, Jacky Ward (17) COUNTDOW N TO ’64 Highlights and pre­ views of worldwide pre-Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates (R) 12:15 ® M O VIE "Penthouse De La Muerte Date) Angelica Maria, Raul Ramirez (No 12:20 ITS) O SC A R R EM EM B ER ED Maxim Mazumdar stars in this one-man play about the notorious playwright Oscar Wilde 1:00 (B NATIONAL SAV E-A -LIFE QUIZ Dramatic reenactments of life-threatening situations will test the viewer s ability to react quickly and effectively In an emergency Celebrity hosts will provide step-by-step techniques for saving lives (17 TRACK AND FIELD Foot Locker Meet " (R) time to slink or swim Jantzen* super sleek maillot or cover-up 25% OFF The Jantzen Swimsuit. Destined to create waves of excitement everytime you wear it. High French legs, d e e p arm holes and low, low b a ck are co m b in e d in an simple unconstructed m aillot that refuses to restrict your activities. Nylon/Lycra* spandex in black, royal or violet. Sizes 6 to 12. Reg. *34, 24.99 The Jantzen Cover-Up. So dem urely m annered you’ll reach for it anytime you want to cover yourself with coolness and comfort. Blouson styling with elastic waist, narrow straps a n d - surprise - built-in bra lining. Cotton/polyester terry cloth in white, blue or yellow. Sizes S, M, L. Reg. *26,1S.99 FOLEY'S BARTON CREEK SQUARE AND HIGHLAND MALL SHOP MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 10 TO 9. Editor Lisa Brown-Richau Associate Editor Evi Pickens Assignments Editor Brian Bamaud Illustrator Paul Drown Contributors Amparo Garda-Kassens, Joseph Kennedy, Tom Maurstad, David Menconi, Howard Murphy, Stan Roberts, Matthew Sorenson, Rich­ ard Steinberg, John Stokes, Com­ fort Thresher, Kenneth Wright On the cover: A scene from Samuel Beckett’s play "Come and Go,” as produced by UT students in the Front Line Theatre Company. Photo by George D. Olson. Special thanks to Hector Cantu for his musical prowess and to Russell Scott for just being Russell. Random thoughts on the tube’s persistence The television generation grows up By BRIAN BARNAUD I don’t watch much TV anymore I don't have the time. I do think about it a lot, though TV is everywhere enveloping us at every turn How can one not think about it7 I grew up with television They say watching the tube too closely will hurt your eyes They say television makes people go out and shoot other people Television makes you want to have sex Television this: television that It’s all rubbish. Think about it. What would you do without the tube7 I'd be in real trouble I wouldn’t be able to go home, pop a Miller and watch MTV’s Martha Quinn tell me that I should like Duran Duran "because their videos are so, so real.'' Without TV, those quiet moments of pure boredom around the house might be taken up by reading, or something horrible that my dad told me he did before TV came around and screwed up children’s study habits. TV deserves credit, and it is finally able to get some respect. Why? Because TV has es­ tablished a history, one that is represented in pop culture by such things as "Leave It to Beaver” jokes and "Gumby” dolls Most of our best fads of late have come from TV, especial­ ly its past. One of the most impressive things I can see in a good number of TV watchers is the way they remember television theme songs. "Gilli- gan’s Island,” “The Beverly Hillbillies” — hell, I know people who can sing them all. Theorists tell us that the reason a series of still pictures flashed on a screen at the speed of 24 frames per second produces a viable motion picture is some wonderful deficiency in the brain called Persistence of Memory wherein the brain holds over an image from a previous stimuli until it is suitably replaced by a similar and cohesive image It doesn't take a UCLA grad to tell you that TV works the same way. This isn't a problem as serious or drastic as world hunger, but it has been keeping me up nights and making me cranky in the morn­ ing. Do you remember watching TV in the 60s, when your favorite reruns were actual network series, when "Wild Wild West” was an import­ ant part of the Western fad, when ” 12 O'clock High,” a Quinn Martin production, was what WWII was really like? I distinctly remember my father watching "Lost in Space” religiously, al­ though he denies it now. (Who can blame him?) I can see my family sitting in the living room of our suburban Oklahoma home, eating hamburgers while Lome Greene shot the bad guys on "Bonanza" and Peter Graves out- gadgeted the East Germans in "Mission Im­ possible.” But the image that pops most in my head, the one that persists more and more is the memory of my folks whipping up a pot of fon- du, a gourmet product that is best remem­ bered by the tiny, utterly ridiculous looking knives that you gave the neighbor kids when they went to college. In this hazily remem­ bered event, the family sat to dip the stringy fondu meat into the boiling pot as all eyes focused on the 19-inch Zenith color console in the living room On the screen was a lady screaming in obvious agony She was stuffed in what looked to be some sort of surreal Speed Queen industrial washing machine Through the device's circular port one could clearly see the poor femme turn many hues that are normally associated with rainbows Later I would discove. this to be just the harmless cultural exercise for an alien in the "Star Trek” episode "The Lights of Zetar I have many more snippets of Televisual mythology that still rest unmarried to the actual series they belong too Not all are of nightmare proportions, but they all itch to be associated with an actual video record I know that I am not the only person who was left with the Per­ sistence of Television from their early watching experiences. Everybody has those moments of electronic fog from the past that lie rusting in the vaults of NBC, ABC, CBS and perhaps the Dumont network And this is good This is good for it lets us know that, yes, Mr Sarnoff, television does have a history Probably one day we won’t remember an event or era by its president, war or depression, but by its TV that was back when ‘Love, “ Yeah, shows. American Style' was o n Bosom Buddies' used to make my week back in college." We owe our thanks to the Persistence of Television Then again maybe not. Hell, I don’t even watch TV much anymore. By the way, does anybody remember how the theme for "Name of the Game" with Gene Barry went? Hearthwarmine. NEJ ATI'S MANE EVENT FOR YOUR BEST LOOK G IV I US A CALL SHACX CAR CL 7 CAT CHRISTIE L EEBIE SLAXLEY MARCH SPECIAL $5.00 C F F AN Y S E R V IC E WALK INS ARE WELCOME 4 74 CHOC 1HTH& SAN ANTONIO 4 Imogw Monday, March 19,1984 rfc Plug We replace th «parts: U □ r □ ' Those parts are ssrvfcsed and raplacsd if nsadad □ Distributor Cap □ Rotor □ PCV Valva □ FualRtar □ Up to 3 Spark Plug Wires We adjust the carburetor for proper fuel mixtura and Hi apead Then the timing is adjusted and are copádmete the engine under power at freeway speeds on the 5829 Burnet Rd. @ Koenig Ln. 459-0728 Your tune-up is guaranteed 6 months or 6,000 mles in Preci­ sion Tune’s throughout the U.S.A. 2340 S. Lamar 445-0606 Appointments Accepted But Not Necessary Saturday 8:00-5:00 Mon.-Fri. 8:00-5:30 Saturday television 6:30 CD CD m *a *s * H The long-smouldering feud between Hot Lips and the nurses in her com­ mand comes to a head when she confines one of them to her tent ® AMERICAN SPORTS CAVALCADE Host Ed Bruce takes viewers to the Indianapolis for the U S Nationals World Championship Drag Rac­ es © NHL HOCKEY New York Rangers at Phila­ delphia Flyers (Sub)ect to blackout) 7:00 o O f f l D DIFFRENT STROKES Arnold loses the ticket money he collected for the Special Olympics. e O d ) ID t h e DUKES OF HAZ2ARD Cooter confesses to charges of hijacking stolen auto parts to protect a friend being framed by a ruthless scoundrel. © ( I) AUSTIN CITY LIMIT8 "John Anderson / Lisa Gilkyson" John Anderson sings "Swin- gin'" and Lisa Gilkyson performs selections from her forthcoming album. © © CD T.J. HOOKER Hooker must accept the help of a psychic woman to find a kid­ napped girl who’ll die unless she is rescued Q ® MOVIE A * A A “The Virgin Spring” (1959) Max von Sydow, Birgitta Valberg. ® ) MOVIE AAV4 "The Dirty Game” (1966) Henry Fonda, Robert Ryan. © MOVIE "Bloody Marlene" (Spanish) (No Date) Hugo Stlglltz, Hector Bonilla. f f i ÓD MOVIE A A “The Cockeyed Cowboys Of Calico County” (1969) Dan Blocker, Mickey Rooney 7:06 © HOGAN S HEROES Kinchloe squares off against "Battling Bruno," the Nazis' would-be boxing champ. 7:30 O o & GD SILVER SPOONS Ricky is shocked to learn his friend Toby is a victim of child abuse. (R) 7:36 © NBA BASKETBALL Atlanta Hawks at Hous­ ton Rockets 8:00 O O S3 ® PEOPLE ARE FUNNY (Premiere) Featured: host Flip Wilson conducts man-on- the-street interviews; an attractive model per­ suades males to help retrieve her purse; a male shopper fills his grocery cart with food from other shopper’s carts; a man delivers a pizza to a "contaminated" nuclear laboratory. G O GD © AIRWOLF Dominic attempts to rescue Cuban political prisoners in exchange for $5 million. © ® GD LOVE BOAT The captain is appalled by the behavior of members of the Rhino Club; a soon-to-be-divorced couple takes one final trip as a pair; a man introduces his depressed friend to a woman. (R) g ® CHURCH STREET STATION Guests: Gene Watson, Richard Bushrod, Cathy Hunter. © USFL FOOTBALL Oklahoma Outlaws at Arizona Wranglers 8*30 O o f f l ® MAMA'S FAMILY Mama is confused when her estranged brother-in-law suddenly shows up in Raytown and pours on the charm. involved 6:45 © MOVIE "El Maiz Esta Verde" (1979) Katha­ rine Hepburn, Ian Saynor. M 0 O O f f i ® THE YELLOW R08E Chance. Roy and Quisto travel to a neighboring commu­ nity and try to help oppressed workers in a swsfitshop. G O ® © MIKE HAMMER Hammer is reun­ ited with a former love only to discover she may be in a massive blackmail scheme © ® MOVIE A A 'A “Sanders Of The River" (1936) Paul Robeson, Leslie Banks. © © GD FANTASY ISLAND A mermaid claims to be tired of being immortal, and a banker fears he will lose his job to a computer. (R)Q ® STARS OF THE GRAND OLE OPRY Guest: Jim Ed Brown. © I SPY "Blackout” © D ) SWITCH Three female rivals hire Pete and Mac to get the money left to them by a racketeer without mob interference. 8:16 ® MOVIE "Alexa” (No Date) Isla Blair, Chris­ topher Blake. 9:30 ® ERNEST TUBB Guests: Lois Johnson ahd the Johnson Sisters, Jack Greene and Bun Wil­ son. © COUNTDOWN TO '84 Highlights and pre­ views of worldwide pre-Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates. (R) 9:50 © UNKNOWN WAR "The Liberation Of Belorussia" Before being driven out, the Nazis killed one out of every four people in Beiorus- sia. 10:00 $7) NIGHT FLIGHT "Film Music" A look at the 1:30 1:00 SATURDAY AFTERNOON 2:00 Carol Burnett SpeedWorld O F-Troop o o G O D NCAA Basketball: Mideast Regional Semifinal NCAA Basketball: Mideast Regional Semifinal Black Achiev. Awards Cont’d SpeedWorld NCAA Basketball: Mideast Regional Semifinal © ID Charlie's Angels a® Finance ® Movie: "The Outside Man" Cont'd • a® Baseball 1984: A Look Ahead SpeedWorld O 33) Fútbol: Atlético Madrid vs. Mexico D® Wrestling as as Ernest Tubb OieOpry ID Ernest Tubb CM Opry as Movie Cont'd as Going Great The Odds Video Oise Jockeys Cara A Cara Baseball: Pre-Season Game Cont'd © © 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 LPGA Golf: Women’s Kemper Open Twilight Zone Incredible Hulk News News 5:30 NBC News 6:00 6:30 Wild Kingdom In Search Of... CBS News HeeHaw Advantage Dance Fever Newswatch Wild Kingdom NBC News Solid Gold Sports Saturday Sports Saturday Bob Newhart CBS News News TheJeffersons Challenge '84 CBS News HeeHaw The Races PBA Bowling: $150,000 Miller High Life Open Wide World Of Sports News Solid Gold Finance Lawmakers Ft. Gardening New House Plays Bearden Presente Tony Brown Matinee At The Bijou PBA Bowling: $150,000 Miller High Life Open Wide World Of Sports Country Iklmaaamnows LPGA Golf: Women's Kemper Open Gardening NBC News Fame Listening M*A*S*H Movie: "El Profesor Hippie” Los Suegros Y Los Nietos El Maleficio Mi Secretaria Movie: “ Nobody’s Perfect” Music City Pop! Country Austin City Country Music HeeHaw Sportsman American Sports Cavalcade Car Care Great Drivers Bobby Bare And Friends Car Care Amer. Sports Sportsman American Sports Cavalcade Car Care Great Drivers Bobby Bare And Friends Car Care Amer. Sports Bewitched Bewitched Sp. Academy Radio 1990 Cartoons Cover Story NHL Hockey Special Delivery Can't Do That The Third Eye livewire Tom. People Mr. Wizard Reggie Jackson Video Disc Jockeys Video Disc Jockeys Movie Cont’d Can Of West Movie: "Man Trailer" Wyatt Earp Wagon Train The Monroes Alias Smith And Jones Lola Beltran Movie: “ Escándalo De Estrellas” Movie: “ El Taxi De Los Conflictos” Animals 0. Wilson Motorweek Wrestling Down To Earth Victory Lane Cont'd World Cup Skiing NFL Moments College Basketball: NCAA Division II Championship SATURDAY EVENING Airwolf Airwolf Airwolf 8:00 7:30 Silver Spoons People Silver Spoons People 7:00 O Dif. Strokes e The Dukes Of Hazzard o Dif. Strokes a® The Dukes Of Hazzard CD The Dukes Of Hazzard T.J. Hooker © a® Austin City Limits a ® T.J. Hooker a ® Dif. Strokes If 33) Concierto a® Movie: “The Cockeyed Cowboys Of Calico County” as (S) Amer. Sports Cont’d Amer. Sports Cont’d Silver Spoons People Seeing Things El Mundo Del Box Church St. Church St. Love Boat Love Boat © as NHL Hockey; New York Rangers at Philadelphia Flyers Cont’d 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 Mama’s Family The Yellow Rose WKRP Saturday Night Live Movie Mama’s Family The Yellow Rose Saturday Night Live Newswatch Mike Hammer Mike Hammer Mike Hammer Fantasy Island Fantasy Island News News News News News News News News Twilight Zone Movie: "The Valley Of Gwangi" All Family Movie: “ Fun In Acapulco" Movie: "1 Was A Male War Bride” M*A*S*H Movie: "The Delphi Bureau" Barney Miller Movie: “The Hawaiians” Movie: “Sanders Of The River" S. Previews Mr. DeMHie Mama's Family The Yellow Rose Saturday Night Live Am. Rocks Hit City Switch Honeymooners Movie: "The Desperadoes" Movie: "Policias Y Ladrones" Fútbol Country Clips Ole Opry Ernest Tubb Bobby Bare And Friends Church St. Country Clips Great Drivers Sportsman Country Clips Ole Opry Ernest Tubb Bobby Bare And Friends Church St. Country Clips Great Drivers Sportsman Countdown'84 Night Flight Movie: "Alexa" Movie: "The Virgin Spring” Video Disc Jockeys MTV Presents: Thomas Dolby Video Disc Jockeys • Spy Of Treaties And Toxins Survival: An Expose The Other Angel Movie: "El Maiz Esta Verde" Boxeo Desde Mexico Movie NBA Basketball: Atlanta Hawks at Houston Rockets Unknown War Night Tracks Night Tracks USFL Football: Oklahoma Outlaws at Arizona Wranglers SportsCenter College BasketbaN Movie: "The Virgin Spring” a Video Disc Jockeys dD Movie: “The Dirty Game" 0 @ H’s Heroes & SportsCenter Movie: “Bloody Marlene” growing popularity ot promoting films through music videos. © MTV PRESENTS: THOMAS DOLBY An encore performance of an exclusive MTV con­ cert taped in Riverside, London in February 1983. CD © THE HONEYMOONERS Ralph views an impending visit of his mother-in-law with a growing sense of disaster. CD © MOVIE "Policias Y Ladrones" (No Date) Resortes. Lucy Gonzalez. 10:30 G TWILIGHT ZONE Arch Hammer can change his face to make It look like anyone else’s he chooses, but he doesn't choose too weil. O CD ALL IN THE FAMILY After five years of suffering, Mike declares his and Gloria's mov­ ing day as "Independence Day.” © ® SNEAK PREVIEWS Neal Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons review "Racing With The Moon and "Misunderstood.” © MOVIE A A A "I Was A Male War Bride” (1949) Cary Grant, Ann Sheridan. © M *A *8*H Exhausted from 24 hours of duty. Hawk eye and Col. Potter respond to a desperate call for surgeons from a Korean army hospital. © (D BARNEY MILLER Fish braces himself for a long-needed operation and Barney makes Wojo and Harris report by phone after they fall in a sowar CD ® MOVIE A A A "The Desperadoes" (1942) Glenn Ford. Randolph Scott. 11.-00 G MOVIE A A ’A "The Valley Of Gwangi" (1969) James Franclscus, Gila Golan. O GD MOVIE A A A "Fun In Acapulco” (1963) Elvis Presley, Ursula Andress. © ® READY WHEN YOU ARE, MR. DEMRLE This documentary on American cinema pioneer Cedi B. DeMMe includes mm clips and inter­ views with family and friends. © MOVIE A A A "The Delphi Bureau” (1972) Laurence Luck!nbill, Joanna Pettet. © GD MOVIE A A A "The HawaUans” (1970) Charlton Heston, Geraldine Chaplin. ® CHURCH STREET STATION Guests: Gene Watson, Richard Bushrod, Cathy Hunter. ® MOVIE A A A A "The Virgin Spring" (1959) Max von Sydow, Birgitta Valberg. 11:30 & COLLEGE BASKETBALL "NCAA Division II Championship" (from Springfield, Mass.) (R) 12:00 ® GREAT DRIVERS Guest: Junior Johnson. © © FUTBOL INTERNACIONAL Atlético Madrid vs. Mexico 12:18 © MOVC "La Tragedia De Un Hombre Ridicu­ lo" (1981) Ugo Tognazzi, Anouk Aimee. 1230 O MOVIE A A A "Rhapsody" (1954) Elizabeth Taylor, Vittorio Passman. ® COUNTRY SPORTSMAN Bobby Lord goas fishing for catfish with Jerry Ciower in Yazoo City, Mississippi. 130 O MOVIE A A "Dr. ’ Black And Mr. Hyde" (1976) Bemie Casey, RoeaNnd Cash. © ® SOUO QOU> Host: Marilyn McCoo. Guests: Patti Austin, Mac Davis, Big Country, Exile, Cyndi Lauper, Cliff Richard; also, a John Lennon video. ® STAR8 OF THE GRAND OLE OPRY Guest Jim Ed Brown. fríday televisión 7:00 6 0 ( 1 ) BEN80N The ghost of Jessica Tate visits Benson, and everyone at the governor’s mansion thinks he 's gone berserk. (R) g © M O PARADISE Activities at a restaurant and entertainment spot outside Nashville © MOVIE A A "The Human Factor” (1975) George Kennedy, John Mills, f l ® CHARLIE'S ANGELS The Angels inves­ tigate the beating of the daughter of a music school owner. 7:30 finds homes 740 0 0 0 3 ) REAL PEOPLE Featured: a cler­ gyman who for abandoned Amerasian children; a mosquito festival in Tex­ as; a Los Angelas couple who grow grass on their roof. O B d i ONE DAY AT A TIME An Italian priest arrives at the Romanos' claiming to be a long-lost relative. 0 CD CD THE FALL GUY Colt must find a bail jumper accused of sinking a boat that carried gold bullion and murdering the ship's captain. ® MO PARADISE Activities at a restaurant and entertainment spot outside Nashville. (5JI SPY “Room With A Rack” 5 (D CHARUE*8 ANGELS A jewel thief seduces JHI in order to steal a diamond the Angels have been hired to protect. 6 COLLEGE BASKETBALL REPORT "NCAA Championship - Regional Semifinals Preview" 746 & BLACK BEAUTY William Devane, Eileen Brennan, Gfynnis O'Connor and Kristoffer Tabori star In this drama based upon Anna Sewell's classic novel about a beautiful ebony horse and the people who owned It. (Part 1 of 2) 7:30 O 0 (D ffi) MAMA MALONE Connie has a date with a married man and, thanks to Mama's television show, now ever body knows. 0 CD TO THE MANOR BORN Although Rich­ ard is anxious to sign a contract with Made­ moiselle Dutoit, he enlists Audrey to help ward off her amorous advances. ® FANDANGO Featured: an interview with Wendy Holcombe. ® MOVIE "Tiempo Para Amar" (No Date) Julio Aleman, Claudia De Colombia. •4 0 Q CBS) THE FACTS OF UFE Jo's happiness is short-lived when she finds out her boyfriend is concealing a deep, dark secret, g Q O GD ffi) MOVIE (1981) Salty Field, Tommy Lee Jones. 0 (D THE COMPLEAT GILBERT AND SULLI­ VAN “The Yeomen Of The Guard" Joel Grey, Elizabeth Gale and Alfred Marks are featured in this tale of love, intrigue and mistaken identi- “Back Roads" g CD CD DYNASTY Tracy and Biake seem to mix business with pleasure in Hong Kong; Claudia receives a call from Matthew. (Part 2 of 3 ) g ® NASHVILLE NOW Live features highlighting country music. (3!) 700 CLUB Featured: a group of reputable bikers called the Jericho Riders, a stewardess who quit drugs. 0 ( j MOVIE AAA "A Clear And Present Danger" (1969) Hal Holbrook, E.G. Marshall © TOP RANK BOXING Wilfred Scypion meets Tony Harrison in a scheduled 10-round middleweight bout (live from Pasadena, Tex.). 6:30 O CD (D NIGHT COURT Harry meets a beau­ tiful rock star on a talk show, but hordes of strange groupies soon follow the couple to the courtroom. 940 O O CD 3D JOHNNY CARSON’S GREATEST PRACTICAL JOKES The host of "Tonight" pre­ sides over a collection of pranks played on celebrities Joan Rivers, Tim Conway, Carl Reiner and Ed McMahon. (R) 0 0 GD HOTEL A junior executive at the hotel falls victim to a sexual blackmailer, and Billy discovers a stowaway in the hotel. (R) g © MOVIE "Escándelo De Estrellas" (No Date) Pedro Infante, Blanquita Amaro. •4 0 ® NASHVILLE AFTER HOURS Guest: Terri Gibbs. 9:40 ® LA BELLE EPOOUE The Metropolitan Museum of Art presents a costume exhibit with a penetrating look at the period from 1880 to 1914. 1040 ® YOU CAN BE A 8TAR Country-flavored tal­ ent contest featuring celebrity judges ' 0 CD SOAP Jessica is held hostage by South American revolutionaries; Mary decides that the family is cursed. 1046 © ALL IN THE FAMILY Archie gets trapped in an elevator with a neurotic secretary, a wealthy black lawyer, and an expectant mother and her husband. 1040 0 0 0 3 ) TONIGHT Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: entertainer Jerry Lewis, actor Dabney Coleman, clarinetist Pete Fountain. O THE JEFFER80N8 George has big plans for a first-rate second wedding, but Louise is having second thoughts, g O (D ALL IN THE FAMILY Edith's erratic behavior puzzles the family and puts a damper on Archie's and her planned trip to a new resort. 0 BARNEY MILLER Barney and his men look for the kidnapper of an antique doll 0 (D BARNEY MILLER Det Janice Went­ worth goes undercover to bust a massage par­ lor and Chano thinks fast to trap an old lady 34 Images Monday, March 19,1984 © © © © © © © © 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON O Another World e Turns Cont’d Capitol o Another World 0(2) Turns Cont'd Capitol OD Turns Cont’d © One Life To Live Capitol 03) Educational Programming The Waltons Guiding Light Guiding Light Guiding Light Little House On The Prairie Love Boat News NBC News News Ent. Tonight Alice Woody Good Times The Jeffersons News CBS News News Newscope Match Game / Squares Search Tom. Scooby Doo BJ/Lobo Happy Days The Jeffersons NBC News News M*A*S*H The Waltons Carol Burnett Bob Newhart Alice CBS News News The Jeffersons Tattletales Tom And Jerry Andy Griffith People's Court News CBS News News 3’s Company General Hospital Edge Of Night ABC Afterschool Special M*A*S*H News ABC News Family Feud P.M. Magazine Infinity Factory Ed. Program Mister Rogers Sesame Street Bus. Report MacNeil / Lehrer Newshour 03) One Life To Live General Hospital Edge Of Night ABC Afterschool Special 3’s Company News ABC News News M*A*S'H 0® Days Cont'd Another World Gilligan Cartoons Day At A Time Love Boat NBC News News People's Court 0(B El Chavo Amor Muere Jugando A Vivir 0® Movie: "Once You Kiss A Stranger" 100 Dias De Ana Incredible Hulk En Busca Del Paraíso Mundo Latino Noticiero SIN El Maleficio Baila Conmigo Scooby Doo He-Man CHiPs Family Feud Ent. Tonight FNN: Moneytalk FNN Final FNN Final © Marketwatch © After Hours © © © <3 Video Oise Jockeys (2) Microwave <3 Offstage Dancin’ U.S.A. Fandango 1-40 Paradise Yesteryear Oprytand On Stage Offstage After Hours Dancin’ U.S.A. Can Be A Star After Hours Offstage Dancin' U.S.A. Fandango 1-40 Paradise Yesteryear Opryland On Stage Offstage After Hours Dancin' U.S.A. Can Be A Star Sonya Alive And Well! Candid Camera Cartoons Radio 1990 Dragnet Special Dusty What Next? Black Beauty Can’t Do That The Third Eye Livewire Tom. People Mr. Wizard Can’t Do That The Third Eye Video Disc Jockeys Video Disc Jockeys 1 Married Joan 700 Club Another Life Bullseye Tic Tac Dough Make A Deal Treasure Hunt The Rifleman Here Come The Brides Dei Saber Movie: "El Giro, El Pinto Y El Colorado” Cara A Cara XETU Pedro Vargas © Movie Cont'd Flintstones Battle Planets The Munsters Beaver Little House On The Prairie Andy Griffith Carol Burnett H's Heroes Sanford © Skiing Cont'd Women's Basketball: NCAA Division III Championship Sportswoman Vic’s Lot Your Golf Fishin’ Hole SportsLook SportsCenter PGA Tour 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 I 11:30 12:00 12:30 Night Court Carson's Practical Jokes When Will The Dying Stop? Carson's Practical Jokes Tonight David Letterman Tonight The Jeffersons | Quincy ' j David Letterman — r ¡ Kojak Thicke All Family Police Story Barney Miller Police Story Barney Miller 3 sCompany 1 j M*A*S*H ------------------- Movie Nightline Hollywood News 1 - ................ ¡ Movie: "Cover Girls" Hotel Hotel The Compieat Gilbert And Sullivan Wildlife Doctor Who Old Enough To Do Time Facts Of Life Night Court Carson's Practical Jokes Tonight | David Letterman Castellano Y Berlin Osborne 24 Horas Movie: "La Dinamita Esta Servida" . Movie: “A Clear And Present Danger” Soap The Rocktord Files j Movie "Once You Kiss A Strang er" Barney Miller Nightline 1 Laugh-ln ISpy News News News News News News News News WEDNESDAY EVENING 7:30 8:00 Facts Of Life 7:00 O Real People Q Day At A Time Mama Malone Movie: “Back Roads" O Real People 0 ® Day At A Time Mama Malone Movie: "Back Roads" © Day At A Time Mama Malone Movie: "Back Roads” Dynasty Manor Bom © The Fall Guy 0® Art Beat 0® The Fall Guy o® Real People 0 ® Baila Conmigo Trampa Para Un Sonador 0® Charlie’s Angels © Dynasty 1-40 Paradise Fandango Nashville Now MO Paradise Fandango Nashville Now Daytona Speed Week Motorcycle Racing After Hours Can Be A Star Offstage j Nashville Now After Hours Can Be A Star Offstage i Nashville Now Alfred Hitchcock Presents Countdown 84¡ Pick The Pros The Year In Tennis Victorian Days The Romantic Era La Belle Epoque Video Disc Jockeys Video Disc Jockeys The Romantic Era Video Disc Jockeys ISpy 700 Club Blondie Another Life Groucho Burns & Allen ! Jack Benny 1 1 Married Joan Love That Bob Vargas Cont’d Movie: "Tiempo Para Amar" Movie: "Escándalo De Estrellas' Noches Carga Pesada ‘ — -...H——--------- Movie Black Beauty News All Family The Catlins Movie: "The New Centurions Basketball SportsWeek Boxing: Scypion vs. Harrison SportsCenter NFL s Greatest Mon ents | SportsLook \ PGA Tour interview with George who mugs men. ® OFFSTAGE An Lindsey. 0 (D THE ROCKFORD FILE8 Rockford has the last laugh on a second-rate comedian who leaves him hanging with a homicide charge. 0 (OD MOVIE "La Dinamita Esta Servida" (No Date) Tony Leblanc, Laura Valenzuela 10:36 0 BARNEY MILLER Barney and his detectives go underground when an air traffic controller goes berserk and tries to "land" passengers single file in the city’s subway system. 10:45 © NFL S GREATEST MOMENTS "More Than A Game" (R) 10:50 ® GREAT PAINTERS Featured Toulouse- Lautrec 1140 O (3 POLICE STORY An Hispanic rookie cop requests a transfer from a posh neighborhood to the heart of the barrio (R) 0 ® OLD ENOUGH TO DO TIME This docu­ mentary examines new legislation that facili­ tates transfer of juveniles to the adult criminal justice system: included is footage of juvenile offenders g 0 THREE'S COMPANY Jack gives a cooking lesson to the seductive wife of a mobster ® NASHVILLE NOW Live features highlighting country music (Í7) COUNTDOWN TO '84 Highlights and pre­ views of worldwide pre-Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates 1146 0 POLICE STORY Two detectives and a beautiful co-worker are assigned to vice squao duty to capture a gangster (R) © M O V IE A A A "The New Centurions "(1972) George C Scott, Stacy Keach 11:30 0 0 0 3 ) LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN Guests Catherine Grant and her unusual chickens, comedian Bill Cosby 0 M *A *8 *H Psychiatrist Major Freedman comes to the asylum that Is the 4077th to clear his head and finds release in its unique form of insanity. (T7) PICK THE PROS Sportswriters preview games and viewers compete for prizes (51) JACK BENNY Jack. Wayne Newton and Louis Nye perform at a charity fund-raising garden party 0 15 MOVIE A A ’■i Once You Kiss A Strang­ er (1969) Paul Burke, Carol Lynley 12:00 O KOJAK Addicted to gambling, a police offi­ cer falls prey to a criminal I MARRIED JOAN 3 t Prizefighter" © MOVIE “La Camara De Terror" (No Date) Boris Karloff. Isela Vega Lady And The 12:10 O i i i MOVIE A A "Cover Girls' (1977) Cor­ nelia Sharpe. Jayne Kennedy 12:15 0 MOVIE A A "See China And Die" (1980) Esther Rolle, Kene Holliday 12:30 0 EYE ON HOLLYWOOD Hosts Paul Moyer. T awny Schneider © 4 MOVIE A A ’ , "The Power" (1968) George Hamilton, Suzanne Pleshette Movie Sonador Opryland Opryland Belle Epoque your choice $59¿ Apple lie Starter System IBM PCjr System • CPU, 64K RAM, 80 column display • One disk drive, 143 Kb capacity • 12" green phosphor monitor • DOS 3.3 operating system • 3 hours hands-on introductory class • CPU, 128K RAM, 80 column display • one disk drive, 360 Kb capacity • 12" green phosphor monitor • PC-DOS operating system Modems, printers and software can be added for only dollars per month. H Get instant ComputerCraft Credit with: • 10% down • $150 to $25,000 purchase. ComputerCraft 30 LOCATIONS THROUGHOUT TEXAS 9012 Research Rd. @ Burnet Rd./458-4236 • 123 E. 7th (Downtown)/482-0792 4211 S. Lamar @ Ben White Blvd./443-4183 Stores open 10-6 Monday thru Saturday. Open Thursday nights until 9. Our Custom Color Prints Will Keep Carol’s New Green Convertible Green Custom Photographic Labs A ' t ‘ e c o r,i e ' ; ‘ M LK a n d as J 7 4 1 1 ’ 7 Cci<->' Devpio; and cpnt ac ! Over n gM ,.p a r ge m p n ts r rnree d ay s On e no.a E -6 BiacK and Wnite D e . e i o t and contact o , e ' n g^* e n la r g e m e n ts ,n two days Old photos copied n 0i,r iab >n tm e e d ay s We • nn^w- e . e rything with care VUARNET. Official Sunglasses Licensee £ of the 1984 Olympic Games Jefferson Square 38th & Jefferson Santa I c Optical Go. (UNUSUAL E Y E W E A R ) 451-1213 THE WAY WE MAKE IT IS NO SMALL THING! DEUVERYl 476-8000 literary________________ Writers ideas half-baked in book on twin siblings By MATTHEW R. SORENSON “ Twins. N a tu re s a m a zin g m y s ­ te ry ", b y K ay Cassill. A th e n e u m P u b ­ lishers On the same day, in the same hour, twin brothers, both pilots living far away from each other suffer heart attacks and die Two 19-year-olds discover that they had been born twins, although raised separately Both had flunked fifth grade math, seen psychiatrists and enioyed wrestling Twins Helen and Harriet didn't write to each other when one of them went to summer cam p because they could read each other's thoughts Once during the autopsy of an old man, doctors removed what they called a "fetus in fetu," which was the six-pound remnant of a twin that had been absorbed into the man’s body while in the womb No, these facts are not taken from "G uinness Book of W orld the Records" or from "Ripley's Believe It or Not." They are only a few of the stranger stories about from Kay Cassill's new book, "Twins." twins Beyond the bizarre, the book tries to describe the experience of being and growing up as a twin: “ Twmship is constantly in the process of devel­ opment. Within an unbroken and, in fact, unbreakable relationship, many permutations and paradoxes are perm issible." Some of the pattern is determined hereditarily, frequently in striking de­ tail. But the life experience is a quest for individuality and the role of par­ ents, family and acquaintances is crucial in the molding of attitudes about identity. Twins are partly what their genes say they are and partly what other people say they are. The positive and the negative sides of the twin experience run par­ allel. Although it is sometimes fun or convenient to exploit the confusion of identity, being treated as half a person is the stifling result Writes Cassill A long step toward maturity is taken when twins recognize and admit that they have helped to bait the traps they later want to avoio Cassill is a twin herself and it seems that the subject of twins is of life-consum ing interest for her Her book is a loosely organized com pen­ dium of astounding facts and star­ tling anecdotes gathered throughout a life of self-examination The search for identity is a theme in the book but also, one suspects a motivation tor the writing of it Her point of view is annoyingly persona! and conde scending The reader is told that we are special' and all you singletons If you are not a can't understand twin, you are led to think you are in­ truding on this esoteric community One result of this attitude is that the accounts tend toward the sub­ jective Cassill tries, by referring to scientific research methods and giv­ ing a quick version of the genetics of twinning, to sound authoritative And yet the explanations are vague and careless None of the titillating cases are examined in any detail No effort is made to tie together all the tales and tidbits. Another result of this soft, idiosyn­ cratic approach is a tendency to d e ­ scend into the mushy realms of the pseudosciences. ESP, astrology and psychoanalysis are freely mixed with genetics, m edicine and half-baked anthropology. The result is a totally uncritical and naive eclecticism, as if the author could not bear to throw away even one of her precious sto­ ries. Not even for the sake of consist­ ency or believability. Both fascinating and frustrating, the book is like a long drive through colorful scenery. After a while you wish you could either get out and get a closer look, or else get to some kind of destination. H AS Y O U R STE R E O C R A S H E D OR BURNED? (In most cases, two day service.) ~ -ÍS > , 451-0408 From old to new we service all makes and models for you, and car radio service too. *11 years experience *Free estimates AUSTIN STEREO AND PC SERVICE 5448 Burnet Rd. in Burnet Plaza t Image* Monday, March 19, 19M ’ *; * * • The Looney, Loo­ (1981) A ni­ 7:00 O O f f l 4 THE A-TEAM The team travels to Mexico to rescue the mother of a young child left behind by a ruthless slave-labor smuggling ring (R) Q Q T © M O V IE * ney. Looney Bugs Bunny Movie' mated Voices by Mel Blanc, June Foray © f f l © FOUL-UPS, BLEEPS & BLUNDERS Featured actor Don Adams and Disney char­ acter Goofy, footage of bloopers from chil­ dren's shows 16 MO PARADISE Activities at a restaurant and entertainment spot outside Nashville 17) NBA BASKETBALL Los Angeles Lakers at Milwaukee Bucks (Sub)ect to blackout) 21 I SPY "The Trouble With Temple" f f l 5 CHARLIE’S ANQELS Someone wants a bridegroom dead and the Angels work fast to insure the pronouncement of wedding vows instead of last rites 7:06 23 SANFORO AND SON Grady must decide whether or not to lie when he receives too many Social Security checks 7:30 © © 3 A.K.A. PABLO While Paul is being Anglicized by a powerful Hollywood agent, Tomas is failing his Spanish language course on purpose 16 FANDANGO Featured an interview with Jim and Jesse 7:35 23 NBA BASKETBALL Atlanta Hawks at San Antonio Spurs 8:00 O O ffl (D RIPTIDE The boys find them­ selves involved in a rock music scam after accepting an assignment to deliver flowers to an injured star O O (D © MOVIE "Getting Physical" (Premiere) Sandahl Bergman, Alexandra Paul. © 3D NOVA "Down On The Farm” An exami­ nation of a dilemma in U.S. agriculture: the short-term need for profit and the long-term depletion of soil and water. Q © f f l (X THREE’S COMPANY Fearing a neg­ ative restaurant review from a food critic, Jack pens a nasty letter to the man and has to fight to retrieve it. (R)Q ® NASHVILLE NOW Live features highlighting country music. @ ARTS PLAYHOUSE “Vincent” Leonard Nimoy stars as Vincent Van Gogh's brother, Theo, in this one-man show taped live at Min­ neapolis' Guthrie Theater. @T) 700 CLUB Featured: singer Debby Boone, a thief "caught” by his conscience. (23 MOVIE "Los Triunfadores" (No Date) Napo­ leon, Javier Ruan. f f l GD MOVIE * * "Flying Misfits" (1976) Rob­ ert Conrad, Simon Oakland. 8:30 © f f l C3) SHAPING UP (Premiere) A 61-year- old fitness guru (Leslie Nielsen) attempts to drum up business at his health spa by lifting the front end of a car to exhibit his strength. @3 WORLD CUP SKIING “Women's Slalom” (from Waterville Valley, N.H.)(R) 9:00 O Q f f l GD REMINGTON STEELE Laura and Remington are commissioned to transport the famed Lavulite jewels from Santa Barbara to Los Angeles, but somehow the real gems are replaced by fakes along the way. © ® AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE "Haunted" A young woman visits her estranged adoptive parents after separating from her husband in this drama written and directed by Michael Roemer, starring Brooke Adams, Jon DeVries and Trish Van Devere. p © f f l CD HART TO HART A traditional fox hunt is marred by murder during the Harts' visit to England. (R )p 9:30 (5) NASHVILLE AFTER HOURS Guest: Boots Randolph. 9:55 © HUGH DOWNS’ SPOTLIGHT Hugh Downs goes behind the scenes to interview actor Raul Julia, prima ballerina Cynthia Gregory and composer Andrew Lloyd-Webber. 10:00 © YOU CAN BE A STAR Country-flavored tal­ ent contest featuring celebrity judges, f f l © SOAP Jessica releases a condemned revolutionary while on her way to a tropical vacation: Chester propositions Eunice's maid of honor 10:30 o o © f f l © PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY COVERAGE Regularly scheduled programming may be delayed or pre-empted for network coverage of primaries In Illinois and Minnesota. Q THE JEFFERSONS The membership com­ mittee of an exclusive tennis club invites George to join, g o ® a l l IN THE FAMILY Archie gets trapped in an elevator with a neurotic secre­ tary, a wealthy black lawyer, and an expectant mother and her husband. © BARNEY MILLER While Barney's lawyer and the judge seek a compromise, Barney is left to cool his heels in a cell with a neurotic murder suspect. (Part 2 of 2) TUESDAY AFTERNOON 1:0 0 1:3 0 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 The Waltons Guiding Light Little House On The Prairie Love Boat News NBC News Alice Woody Good Times The Jeffersons News CBS News Match Game / Squares Search Tom. Scooby Doo BJ / Lobo Happy Days The Jeffersons NBC News Guiding Light The Waltons Carol Burnett Bob Newhart Alice ÍJaui* nows IJmu* nows News News News Ent. Tonight Newscope M*A*S*H The Jeffersons 3's Company CBS News CBS News Turns Cont'd Capitol Guiding Light Tattletales Tom And Jerry Andy Griffith People's Court News General Hospital Edge Of Night Porky Pig 3's Company M*A*S*H News ABC News Family Feud P.M. Magazine Educational Programming instruction Equal Justice Mister Rogers Sesame Street Bus. Report Mac Neil / Lehrer Newshour CD GD Days Cont’d Another Work! Gilligan Cartoons Day At A Time Love Boat General Hospital Edge Of Night Rhoda Mork & Mindy 3's Company News ABC News NBC News News News M*A*S*H People's Court f f l® El Chapulin Amor Muere Jugando A Vivir 100 Dias De Ana En Busca Dei Paraíso Mundo Latino Noticiero SIN El Maleficio Baila Conmigo Incredible Hulk FNN: Moneytalk FNN Final FNN Final Scooby Doo He-Man CHiPs Family Feud Ent. Tonight Dancin’ U.S.A. Fandango I-40 Paradise Yesteryear Oprytand On Stage Offstage After Hours Dancin’ U.S.A. Can Be A Star Dancin’ U.S.A. Fandango 1-40 Paradise Yesteryear Opryland On Stage Offstage After Hours Dancin' U.S.A. Can Be A Star Alive And Well! Candid Camera Cartoons Radio 1990 Dragnet Dusty What Next? Black Beauty Going Great The Odds Livewire Tom. People What Next? Going Great The Odds Video Disc Jockeys Video Disc Jockeys o Another World o Turns Cont'd Capitol o Another World O f f l Turns Cont’d Capitol © One Life To Live © ©® Electric Co. o ® One Life To Live f f l ® Movie: "Storm Warning’’ (BD Marketwatch (5) © After Hours © After Hours Sonya Offstage Offstage dD Special Video Disc Jockeys Sewing Etc. 1 Married Joan 700 Club Another Life Bullseye Tic Tac Dough Make A Deal Treasure Hunt The Rifleman Here Come The Brides Dei Saber Movie: “ El Ahijado De LA Muerte" Cara A Cara XETU Movie Movie Cont'd Flintstones Battle Planets The Munsters Beaver Little House On The Prairie Andy Griffith Carol Burnett H’s Heroes H’s Heroes & Ringside Review USFL Football: New Orleans Breakers at Jacksonville Bulls SportsLook SportsCenter NBAWk. TUESDAY EVENING 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 1 1 :0 0 1 1 :3 0 12 :00 12 :3 0 The A-Team O 0 Movie o The A-Team o ® Movie Movie Movie: "Getting Physical” Riptide Riptide Movie: “ Getting Physical" Movie: "Getting Physical" Remington Steele Remington Steele Primaries Tonight The Jeffersons Quincy Primaries Tonight David Letterman Kojak David Letterman All Family Magnum, P.l. McCloud Primaries Barney Miller Magnum, P.I. McCloud Foul-Ups a.k.a. Pablo 3's Company Shaping Up Hart To Hart Barney Miller 3's Company M*A*S*H Nightline M.T. Moore Austin Perspective Nova American Playhouse Ascent Of Man Foul-Ups a.k.a. Pablo 3’s Company Shaping Up Hart To Hart Barney Miller Nightline Laugh-ln 1 Spy CD© The A-Team Riptide O SD Baila Conmigo Chespirito Remington Steele Primaries Tonight David Letterman De Fiesta 24 Horas Movie: “ Hora Y Media De Balazos” Chespirito Charlie's Angels Movie: "Flying Misfits' Soap The Rockford Files Movie: "Storm Warning" U«U|Q l»8W5 IJauia nows News News News News News News O (3) (2> © © © f f l® f f l© f f l © (SD © © 1-40 Paradise Fandango Nashville Now After Hours Can Be A Star Offstage Nashville Now 1-40 Paradise Fandango Nashville Now NBA Basketball: Los Angeles Lakers at Milwaukee Bucks as Bloodlines 0 Video Disc Jockeys Arts Playhouse After Hours Can Be A Star Offstage Nashville Now Sports Probe Alfred Hitchcock Presents Dreams Cheerleading Hugh Downs' Spotlight Arts Playhouse Video Disc Jockeys Video Disc Jockeys Opryland Opryland Basketball 700 Club Interview Another Life Groucho Burns & Allen Jack Benny 1 Married Joan Love That Bob Movie: "Los Triunfadores” Lola Beltran La Señora Movie: “ Bloody Marlene" NBA Basketball: Atlanta Hawks at San Antonio Spurs News The Catlins Movie: “ Goodbye, Franklin High” World Cup Skiing SportsCenter SportsLook Top Rank Boxing •Spy <2 Movie Cont'd (2 Sanford © Ringside Review f f l © BARNEY MILLER Det. Janice Went­ worth brings romance into Wojo's life and a lesson in equality of the sexes to an ex-vice cop when she thwarts an assassination. © OFFSTAGE An Lindsey. f f l © THE ROCKFORD FILES Rockford, ordered to join a therapy group, tries to help a patient who claims she is receiving threats from the underworld. CD © MOVIE “Hora Y Media De Balazos’’ (No Date) Resortes, Lucy Gonzalez. interview with George 10:55 O O f f l ® TONIGHT Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: actress Amy Irving, comedian Jerry Seinfeld, Fran Tate. 11:00 O © MAGNUM, P.l. Magnum returns to Robin's Nest to find a number of strange guests being doted upon by Higgins. (R) © © ASCENT OF MAN “The Ladder Of Cre­ ation" The controversy that surrounded Darwin’s startling theories on evolution is exa­ mined with journeys to the Welsh countryside and the jungles of the Amazon. © BARNEY MILLER An open house at the 12th brings seedy characters into the squad room. © THREE'S COMPANY The gang goes off for a weekend at Larry's boss's cabin. © NASHVILLE NOW Live features highlighting country music. © DREAMS OF GOLD A unique look at Olym­ pic competition through slow motion footage and computer animation. (R) © ARTS PLAYHOUSE "Vincent" Leonard Nimoy stars as Vincent Van Gogh's brother, Theo, in this one-man show taped live at Min­ neapolis' Guthrie Theater. 11:10 (13 MOVIE * * "Goodbye, Franklin High" (1978) Lane Caudell, Ann Dusenberry. 11:30 © MAGNUM, P.l. Magnum reluctantly accepts the job of helping five schoolgirls find their missing teacher. (R) © M*A*S*H The long-smouldering feud between Hot Lips and the nurses in her com­ mand comes to a head when she confines one of them to her tent. © JACK BENNY Jack plays a man who adopts an unwanted orphan (Milton Berle). f f l © MOVIE * * "Storm Warning" (1951) Ginger Rogers, Ronald Reagan. 11:46 33 MOVIE "Bloody Marlene" (Spanish) (No Date) Hugo Stiglitz, Hector Bonilla. 11:66 O O f f l © LATE NIGHT WITH OAVK> LETTERMAN Guests: comedian Bobby Kosser, musician Sadao Wantanabe. 12*0 O KQJAK Unsolved street murders prompt Kojak to send a man originally from the neigh­ borhood undercover there. (29 I MARRIED JOAN “Ladies Prison” 12:10 Q © MCCLOUD A union executive is marked for murder by thugs because of his knowledge of shady deals between unions and criminal elements. (R) 12*0 © MARY TYLER MOORE Mary hires Phytiis as her newsroom assistant with disastrous resulta. © OPRYLAND ON STAGE Rising country music stars perform. Monday, March 19,1fC4 hnogtt S3 * » « » I » i i H 1 I « 9 I* * - » monday television MONDAY AFTERNOON rao O O f f i ® T V 8 BLOOPER8 ANO PRACTI­ CAL JOKES Featured: Tom Boeley and Barbi Benton are the victim s of practical Jokes; com­ mercials featuring animals; sportscaster Fred Roggln's sports bloopers. S S d ) © SC A R EC R O W *M R S.K M Q Lee and Amanda must locate an agency courier who has failed to deliver a top-secret report to MBlfOBB © © ® AUTOMAN Automan travels to Hol­ lywood to solve the murder of a gossip colum­ nist and break a drug smuggling operation. ® MO PARADISE A ctivities at a restaurant and entertainment spot outside Nashville. ® I SPY “ Magic M irror” © ® CHARLIE’S ANQELS Kelly s past as a police officer comes back to haunt her when a Junkie is released from prison and returns for jg U S F L FOOTBALL New Orleans Breakers at Jacksonville Bulls 700 @ MOVIE A A A “ The Far Country” (1955) James Stewart, Ruth Roman. 7:30 © ® INSOE STORY “ A Conversation With Preeident Jimmy C arter" Hodding Carter discusses the Reagan adm inistration's infor­ mation policy with form er President Jimmy QBflBf ® FANDANGO Featured: an interview with Mickey Gilley. © © MOVIE “ M ujerdtas” (1972) Nubia M arti. Carlos Cortes. 84» © O © ® NBC UVE THEATER "M r. Rob­ erts” As World War II comes to a dose, Lt. Doug Roberts (Robert Hays), commissioned on a navy supply ship in the South Pacific, fears his dream of seeing combat duty w ill never be fulfilled because the ship's overbearing captain (Charles Durning) wishes to keep him under his supervision B Q ( S ( D KATE * ALUE (Premiere) When Kate M cArdle's date arrives to pick her up, he finds her roommate, Allie Smith, wallpapering a closet. © ® FRONTLINE “The Mind Of A Murderer” Kenneth B¡ anchi, convicted mass murderer who was one of two men involved in the Los Angeles Hillside Strangler case, is profiled. (Part 1 of 2 )g © f f l ( i MOVIE A A A “ Rich And Famous” (1981) Candice Bergen, Jacqueline Bisset. ® NASHVILLE NOW Live features highlighting country music (3$ 700 CLUB Featured: a Vietnam veteran's agonizing adjustment to his family, redpes for weight watchers. © ® MOVIE A A “ The Damned Don't Cry” (1950) Joan Crawford, David Brian. A O ® © NEWHART Dick agrees to host a 'ta lk show but has second thoughts when his first guest is the w orld’s smallest horse. M O O 8 (D © CAGNEY * LACEY A missing persons case evolves into a murder investiga­ tion for Chris and Mary Beth. © ® GREAT PERFORMANCES "The Sol­ dier’s Tale" Stravinsky’s dassic tale is present­ ed in an animated version, designed and directed by cartoonist Robert Blechman and featuring the voices of Andre Gregory, Max von Sydow and Galina Panova with music by the Loe Angeles Chamber Orchestra. ® ONEDiN UNE “ Passage To Pernambuco” Despite a disaster in the vineyards, James manages to bargain for his square rigger. The Pampero sails for South America. 0:15 @ MOVIE "Penthouse De La Muerte” (No Date) Angelica Maria, Raul Ramirez. *3 0 ® NASHVILLE AFTER HOURS Guest: Gamble Rogers. © DREAMS OF GOLD A unique look at Olym­ pic com petition through stow motion footage and computer animation. 1*00 ® YOU CAN BE A STAR Country-flavored tal­ ent contest featuring celebrity Judges. ® FIRST EDITION Guest: Bob G ottlieb, editor- in-chief of Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., publishers. © ® SOAP Jessica comes home from the hospital; Dutch and Eunice announce their marriage plans; Mary reveals the photos she’s found of Burt, Danny and scantily clad women. 1*06 @ ALL IN THE FAMILY Archie is interviewed by a news reporter conducting a "man on the street” interview. 1*30 © © © ® BEST OF CARSON Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: singer Glen Campbell, actor- acomedían Dorn Deiuise (R) © THE JEFFER80N8 On Lionel's graduation day, he is “ flying high, q ” 8 GD ALL IN THE FAMILY Edith's favorite cousin comes to the rescue when Archie gets the flu. © BARNEY MILLER Harris takes over com­ mand of the squad when Barney is Jailed for contempt of court. (Part 1 of 21 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 Little House On The Prairie Love Boat News NBC News News Ent. Tonight Alice Woody Good Times The Jeffersons News CBS News News Newscope M’ A’ S’ H Match Game / Squares Search Tom. Scooby Doo BJ/Lobo Happy Days The Jeffersons NBC News News The Waltons Carol Burnett Bob Newhart Alice CBS News News The Jeffersons Tattletales Tom And Jerry Andy Griffith People’s Court News CBS News News 3's Company The Waltons Guiding Light Guiding Light Guiding Light Educational Programming Cont’d Why? Move Along Request Time Mister Rogers Sesame Street Bus. Report MacNeil / Lehrer Newshour General Hospital Edge Of Night Porky Pig 3's Company M’ A’ S’ H News ABC News Family Feud P.M. Magazine General Hospital Edge Of Night Rhoda Mork & Mindy 3's Company News ABC News News M’ A’ S’ H Another World GMHgan Cartoons Day At A Time Love Boat NBC News News People's Court Amor Muere Jugando A Vivir 100 Dias De Ana En Busca Del Paraíso Mundo Latino Noticiero SIN El Maleficio Veronica Incredible Hulk Scooby Doo He-Man CHiPs Family Feud Ent. Tonight FNN: Moneytalk FNN Final FNN Final Dancin' U.S.A. Fandango I-40 Paradise Yesteryear Opryland On Stage Offstage New Country Dancin' U.S.A. Can Be A Star Dancin' U.S.A. Fandango I-40 Paradise Yesteryear Opryland On Stage Offstage New Country Dancin’ U.S.A. Can Be A Star Alive And Well! Candid Camera Cartoons Radio 1990 NHL Hockey What Next? Black Beauty Can’t Do That The Third Eye Livewire Tom. People Mr. Wizard Can’t Do That The Third Eye Video Disc Jockeys Video Disc Jockeys Alive! 1 Married Joan 700 Club Another Life Bullseye Tic Tac Dough Make A Deal Treasure Hunt The Rifleman Here Come The Brides Movie: "La Campana Del Infierno” Cont'd Del Saber Movie: "El Taxi De Los Conflictos” Cara A Cara XETU Movie Flintstones Battle Planets The Munsters Beaver Little House On The Prairie Andy Griffith Carol Burnett H's Heroes Sanford NBA Basketball: San Antonio Spurs at San Diego Clippers SportsLook SportsCenter NFL Moments O Another World O Turns Cont'd Capitol o Another World • (2) Turns Cont'd Capitol CD Turns Cont'd Capitol CD One Lite To Uve © 3 ) One Lite To Live 8® Days Cont’d 8 9 3 ) El Chavo 8® Movie: "So This Is Love” (3) Marketwatch (5) New Country Offstage CD New Country Offstage (5) Sonya (3) Special - STUDENTS ■■-ssr*ELIMINATION Monday, March 19,1984 Imago* 9 A reflection o f style. The n e ig h b o rh o o d is a rich hom e su rro u n d in g s com bine for b le n d o f fin e , o ld hom e s a n d fine student liv in g , d o m e d is ­ t o w e rin g oaks. A n u n m a t c h e d cover a n exceptional reflection location for lux ury co n d o m in iu m o f contem porary lifestyle, d o m e l iv in g . Less th a n f o u r blocks tour The Heritage. north o f the I nii'ersity cam pus. T h e H e r i t a g e p r e s e n t s a variety of m asterfully d e signed 1 -b e d ro o m I-b a th , 2 -b e d ro o m 2-batli floorplans. W ith private balconies, s u n n in g deck, jaiuzzi spa. fireplaces, built-in desks a n d bookshelves, ceilin g fans, resident p a r k in g a n d a fu ll range of lu x ­ ury features throughout. Luxury C ondom inium s f o r Students 3107 Tom Green 479-8174 S u p e r b in ve stm en t security, c o n v e n ie n c e a n d p r e s t i g i o u s From the upper $ 6 O's. 4 Blocks From C am pus . 11mill venture by ( iory Cnywood .\nderson, Inc. and fn/m k itzfuitruk Architect. BIKINI TIME! Get ready for summer now. MEDICALLY APPROVED ELECTROLYSIS will permanently remove any unwanted hair you have. m e n and w o w k n treated — - i itera ry___________ ______________ Femininity: mere decoration or desirable female quality? By USA BROWN-RICHAU “F e m in in it y b y Susan Brownmiller Linden Press, Simon and Schuster. In her detailed and delightful second book, Fem inin­ ity," author Susan Brownmiller pinpoints a most unset­ tling irony: femininity is a womanly attribute from which only men benefit. High heels, polished nails, affected vulnerability - all are exam ples of what is considered feminine W om­ en who establish their femininity upfront can expect special favors from men, such as having their doors opened and cigarettes lit. In these situations, men b e ­ com e the chivalrous protectors. Men cherish femininity because they ap pear more m asculine by contrast With this book, Brownmiller, in effect, is asking wom­ en to d ecid e which is more important to them being dainty, gracious ladies who defer to men or being inde­ pendent women who don't have to rely on male approv­ al for esteem Femininity, as Brownmiller defines it, is “im posed lim­ itations," a tradition of women being forced to act, dress and think against their natural drives and desires Men create the feminine standards, Brownmiller says, and women com ply with them b ecause women thrive on male approval. "To be helped with one's coat, to let the man do the driving, to sit mute while the man does the ordering and picks up the ch e ck — such trained behavorial inactivity . but it is may be ladylike, gracious, romantic and flirty ultimately destructive to the sense of the functioning, productive self," Brownmiller writes. "Fem inine psy­ chology adjusts to the required denial of routine initia­ tive by claim ing that 'feeling ladylike and protected' is a GRANT FOSTER & ASSOCIATES, INC. 1801 Lavaca #105 477-3757 Susan BrownmiOor preferred state of being Divided into sections such as "Body,' Clothes and "Ambition," this book seem s rather pointless at first, merely a feminist's collection of historical trivia The to­ pic itself seem s non-controversial, so why devote a whole book to it7 Is there that m uch to say9 The answer is yes Femininity is not merely lace and perfume, it is a way of life Brownmiller, a respected journalist and author of the acclaim ed study of rape "Against Our Will," takes the tame topic of femininity and whips it into an issue worthy of discussion "Femininity" is not a mandate, proclam ation or bitchy GRANT FOSTER INTRODUCING A NEW CONCEPT IN INSURANCE PLANNING — “UNIVERSAL LIFE” The plan features: (1) sensitive interest rates — cur­ rently 12% (2) disappearing premium after the 6th year (3) future tax advantages. Ask your Fidelity Un­ ion Associate about Universal Life and our competitive term rates that can help you take the "it's" out of un­ certain situations. Sheila Biedermann Margaret Cina Gaynell Eppler Tom Kenyon Dick Temple Jane Collins Margaret Myers Roger Noak Ronald Styron Susan Torres 10 Image» Monday, March 19,1984 Unionlife Bette Pritchett, R.E. For Free Booklet or Complimentary Consultation Day or Evening Call 477-4070 HAIR FREE CENTER OF AUSTIN 600 W. 28th Suite 205 ^ r a r n e r jewelers U.T. CLASS RINGS SPECIAL! 10K Gold. . .$199.00 with 20 pt. diamond . $389.00 ............. lOKGold. with 5 pt. diamond. . $165.00 * Varner Jewelers 3233 Bee Caves Road West Woods Shopping Center 327-7960 nT BEE CAVES T WEST WOODS SHOPPING CENTER daytime television 6.-00 0 C 88 MORMNQ NEW8 1 S ) ( B HEALTH FIELD o MORNING 8TRETCH 0 ( 2 ) CENTRAL TEXA8 © 0 0 0 0 MORNING CENTRAL TEXAS © OOOO MORNiNQ SAN ANTONIO @ MORNINOLINE (17) CART00N8 © UVEWIRE (3D FIT FOR UFE FUNTIME ffi (T) A8C NEW S THI8 MORNING 6:30 O f f i ® N BC N EW S AT SU N R ISE 15) o © ® JIM M Y 8W A 0Q ART O NEW 8 O ® C88 EARLY MORNINQ NEW S © ABC NEW8 THIS MORNINQ ® ALIVE! 5 3 6 5 5 1 DREAM OF JEANNIE 6:46 © ® A.M. WEATHER ffi (D ABC NEW8 T H » MORNINQ 7300 O © f f l ® t o d a y ® 0 BUQ8 BUNNY ANO FRIEN06 O ® © C BS MORNINQ NEW8 o © ® 0 0 0 0 MORNINQ AMERICA © FNN: MONEYTALK (If) CALLIOPE © ® 3-2-1 CONTACT (R )g © M R W IZARD'S WORLD (MON, WED. FRI) (® AQAM8T THE 0 0 0 8 (TUE. 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FRI) 0 © EL CHAPULIN COLORADO (TUE, THU) © COLLEGE W RESTUNG (MON) © RMG8IOE REVIEW (R)(TUE) 1:30 0 0 3 ) 0 CAPITOL © O FFST A G E © ® EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMING (TUE, THU) © DU 8TT8 TREEHOU8E (3D I MARRIED JOAN f f i ® ANOTHER WORLD 0 © EL AMOR NUNCA MUERE © WOMEN’8 BASKETBALL (WED) © COLLEGE BASKETBALL (THU) 2 3 0 O THE WALTONS 0 0 3 ) © GUIDING LIGHT o MATCH GAME / HOLLYWOOD SQUARES h o u r © © ® GENERAL HOSPITAL © DANCIN' U.S.A. © A L IV E ANO WELL! © WHAT WILL THEY THINK OF NEXT? (3D 700 CLUB © © JUGANOO A VIVIR ©) THE FUNTSTONE8 2 3 5 2:30 © FA N D A N G O © ® WHY IN THE WORLD (MON) © ® INFINITY FACTORY (WED) © ® AMERICAN HISTORY (THU) © ® MOVING RIGHT ALONG (FRI) © THE ADVENTURES OF BLACK BEAUTY © ® D © U8FL FOOTBALL (TUE) © COLLEGE BASKETBALL (FRI) IL © F N N FINAL © O PR Y LA N O ON STAGE © CANOID C A M B IA ® MISTER ROGERS (R) @ BATTLE OF THE PLANETS @ CLUB GALA VI8ION 236 2:46 330 O LJTTLE HOU8E ON THE PRAIRIE O ALICE ® c INCREDIBLE HULK O SEARCH FOR TOMORROW I ® THE WALTON8 TTLETAU © © ffi ® EDGE OF NIGHT © FNN: MONEYTALK © M O PARADISE © ® MOVING RIGHT ALONG (MON) © ® ON AND ABOUT INSTRUCTION (TUE) © ® EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMING (THU) © ® W ESTERN CIVILIZATION (FRO © YOU CAN’T DO THAT ON TELEVISION (MON. WED. FRI) © GOING GREAT (TUE, THU) © V ID E O DISC JOCKEYS (3D ANOTHER U FE © EL TESORO DEL SA BER (MON-THU) © A MEDIA LUZ L 0 8 TRES (FRO f f i ® CARTOON8 9 NBA BASKETBALL (MON) I © 100 DIAS DE ANA © T H EM U N ST ER S 3 3 6 3 3 0 © ® EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMING (WED) 3 3 0 O WOOOY WOOOPECKER ANO FREN O S O 8 C 0 0 B Y D 0 0 © T O M AND JERRY © PORKY PIG ANO FRIEND (MON. TUE, THU. FRI) © ffi ® ABC AFTER* HOOL SPECIAL (WED) © YESTERYEAR IN NASHVILLE © ® REQUEST TIME (MON) © ® EQUAL JU8T1CE (TUE) © ® ON AND ABOUT INSTRUCTION (THU) © ® WRITING FOR A REASON (FRO © THE THIRD EYE (MON. WED, FRI) © AGAINST THE 0 0 0 6 (TUE. THU) (3DBULLSEYE © MOVIE (MON-THU) ffi ® RHOOA(MON, TUE. THU. FRO 9 SPORTSW OMAN (WED) 9 SPORTSW EEK (R)(THU) 3:35 © L E A V E IT TO BEAVER 4 3 0 O LOVE BOAT 0 GOOD TIMES ® © SCOOBY 0 0 0 O B J /LOBO o ® CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS © ANDY GRIFFITH © THREE’S COMPANY (MON. TUE, THU. FRI) © U V E W IR E (3D TIC TAC DOUGH ffi ® MORK ANO MM OY (MON, TUE, THU. FRI) f f i ® ONE DAY AT A TIME 0 © EN BUSCA DEL PARAISO Q V K T 8 VACANT LOT (WED) 9 HOR8E RACING WEEKLY (R) (THLf) © LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE • 436 430 O THE JEFFER80N8 ® c HE-MAN ANO M ASTERS OF THE UNL VE‘! 8 O HAPPY O AY8AG AM O ® BOBNEW HART _ P E0I F 8 COURT A |f *A *8 *H © ® 8 E 8 A M E STREET g (3D L E T S MAKE A DEAL ® THREE’S COMPANY ffi ® LOVE BOAT 9 PLAY YOUR BEST GOLF (WED) 9 SPORTSLOOK (R) (THU) 9 SPORTSLOOK (FRQ J 4:45 © CUENTOS DE LA SERPIENTE EMPLUMA­ DA (TUE) 530 O O © © © ® NEW S ® © C H IP S O THE JEFFER80N8 O ® AUCE © F N N FINAL © O FF8T A G E © C A R T O O N S © T H ET O M O RROW PEOPLE © V O E O O IS C JOCKEYS (3D TREASURE HUNT CARA A CARA © © M U N O O LATINO 9 FISHIN* HOLE (WED) 9 COLLEGE BASKETBALL REPORT (THU, FRI) © A N D Y GRIFFITH 535 530 O O © ® NBC NEW S O O ® © C B 8 N E W 8 | © f f i ® ABC NEW S g © N E W COUNTRY (MON) © N A SH V ILLE AFTER HOUR8 (TUE-FRI) © ® BU 8M E88 REPORT © M R WIZARD’S W ORLD (MON. WED, FRI) © WHAT W ILL THEY THINK OF NEXT? (TUE. THU) (3D THE RIFLEMAN © © NORCIERO NACIONAL SIN 9 SPORTSLOOK (MON-WED) 9 SPORTSCENTER (THU. FRQ © CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS 535 ESDnsa •^§§p| channel guide 0 ® KTBC, Austin, CBS ® ® KVU E, Austin, ABC 0 ® K T W , Austin, NBC 0 ® KBVO, Austin, Independent 0 ® KLRU, Austin, PBS ® SIN, Spanish International ® Financial Naws Natwork ® Nashvilla Network © USA Cable Network © Nickelodeon/ARTS ® MTV, M usk Television (3D CBN Cable Network C9 Gala vision O WTBS, Atlanta * Lifetime 9 ESPN, Sports ■ Broadcest Channel □ Cable Channel Stacy Reach stars as Mike Hammer, America’s toughest private-eyé, and Lindsay Bloom stars as his secretary, Velda, in “ Mickey Spillane’s Mike Hammer,” airing Saturdays on CBS. (Stations reserve the right to make last-minute changes.) a J O I M A J I n e M M n M Q V IQ Q fi M V w i T | f J • * I//UWM ¡Performance Schedule i for the week of ¡March 19-25 ¡ ¡ S I ■ 19 Monday Faculty Artists Series Barbara Honn, soprano David Garvey, piano Recital Hall West at 8pm ■ 20, 23, 25 Tuesday, Friday, Sunday Beethoven Festival Students of Nancy Garrett Recital Hall West at 8pm ■ 20 Tuesday Guest Artists Series Mitchell Gershenfeid, tuba Bates Recital Hall at 8pm ■ 21 Wednesday UT Jazz Lab Band Dave Aaberg, Director Bates Recital Hall at 8pm ■ 22 Thursday UT Jazz Ensemble Jeff Benedict, Director Bates Recital Hall at 8pm ■ 23 Friday University Student Chamber Music Wayne Barrington, Director Bates Recital Hall at 8pm ■ 24 Saturday Scholarship Benefit UT Chamber Music Society Paul Olefsky, Coordinator Bates Recital Hall at 8pm Tickets available at the door $15 patron, $5 public; $3 student Admission free except as noted Information, 471-5401 5 Department of Music College of Fine Arts The University of Texas at Austin CARL PERKINS’ "Blue Suede Shoes" TONIGHT 8:00 P.M. with special guests The Jimmie Gilmore Band Tickets $400 For Information Call 443-7037 or 443-8885 200 Academy <$> <^> <$> c o d a n c e and Farrell Dyde in DsnCB MSiSthOll 8pm, March 24. PAC Concert Hall Houston choreographer/dancer Farrell Dyde -two solo dances Sharir Dance Company -two dances (one premiere) by Yacov Sharir Public $9, $7 Students, senior citizens/CEC Fee Holders $7, $5 Tickets at PAC, Erwin Center and all UTTM outlets Information 471-1444 Charge-a-Ticket 477-6060 0 presented by Sharir Dance Company in residence at The College of Fine Arts The University of Texas at Austin Performing Arts Center and Laguna Gloria Art Museum feminist examination; it is a serious scholarly work, sup­ ported by detailed research. She cites psychologists doctors, sociologists, philosophers and other writers, what results is a tightly packaged repudiation of the feminine heritage The magic of this book, however, lies in her writing and empathetic approach. Instead of ridiculing women who spend their lives cultivating 10 perfect nails, Brownmiller tries to explain what has led them to this fate, using her own anecdotes and personal experienc­ es to illustrate the struggles of womankind She con­ demns no one and reveals little unbridled anger yet manages to pique our concern and social outrage This is a difficult achievement for anyone trying to dismantle any irrational social convention. What ultimately makes "Femininity” palatable, however, is her elegant conver­ sational style and sense of humor. Both women and men, feminist or not, will find this book entertaining and informative without taking of­ fense to Brownmiller's stance because she is neither flippant nor preachy. The appalling and the ridiculous are appalling and ridiculous without anyone having to label them as such. Brownmiller’s history of corsets and bound feet are prime examples. Women physically harmed their bodies in the name of femininity. This needs no commentary. Nor does her discussion on education and ambition It's a fact that women were once denied educational opportunities. As to why, Brownmiller lets Rousseau do the talking: "Rousseau theorized in ’Emile’ that the pur­ pose in educating a girl was to render her 'agreeable to man,' because women by nature were ‘framed to please, to live in subjection '’ Even today, some men prefer women less intelligent than they are because it automatically renders them superior; by contrast, they are more intelligent. Writes Brownmiller "Knowledge is power and the lack of it is charmingly feminine.” Brownmiller notes that biological femaleness has lit­ tle to do with being feminine and what is biologically female is not always feminine Menstruation is a case in "The menstrual flow, despite its testament to point female fertility and to gender, runs diametrically coun­ ter to the prized feminine virtues of neatness, order and a dainty, sweet and clean appearance." Hairy legs suf­ fer the same unladylike curse Her discussion of breasts is a summation of what it means to be female, feminine and hopelessly sub­ scribed to social convention It is almost as funny as Nora Ephron’s famous Esquire essay, albeit more thought-provoking Once again, she blames men for women's problems: It is they who invent and refine the myths, who discuss breasts publicly Without doubt it was men who created the fetish of size and shape It's an old joke that men like breasts more than women do. Brownmiller drives the point home, calling breasts a "thoroughly colonized province of masculine sexuali­ t y ” Breasts that are not supple are considered inferior, therefore undesirable to men "... we have seen too many pictures in National Geographic of wizened old females with sagging ... udderlike breats that hang for­ lornly to the waist No, not sexy. Not pretty and attrac­ tive .... Who wants to dwell on the the thought that breasts can look like udders, that breasts are udders Despite such well-stated points, it will not be easy for women to reconcile their need to be independent with their heritage of dependence. There are no simple an­ swers, which Brownmiller admits. The ambiguity of her own feelings on the subject reaffirms the complexity of this social convention; it is also the reason that this book, as a whole, will not change society However, "Femininity” is important, because it defines the femi­ nine issue Those who read "Femininity” and yet ask "What’s wrong with being treated like a lady” are missing the point entirely. Femininity is not a matter of right and wrong; it is one of function. What is femininity, other than applied decoration, and where does it lead wom­ en except into the arms of approving men7 Does it serve any other purpose? Though she doesn't have all the answers, Brownmiller has at least paved the way that might lead us to them T h e S u r v i v a l ( i a n i c is c h e s s i n t h e w o o d s . I t ’ s a t e a m s p o r t p l a y e d w i t h m e n a n d w o m e n f r o m a l l w a l k s o f l i f e t h a t s h o o t s p a i n t - f i l l e d ... e a c h c a r r y i n g a ( () p i s t o l p e l l e t s . T h e o b j e c t is f o r y o u r t e a m t o f i n d t h e e n e m y ’ s f l a g , h i d d e n s o m e w h e r e i n t h e w o o d s , a n d r e t u r n it t o y o u r o w n f l a g s t a t i o n — w h i l e s t o p p i n g thi* e n e m y f r o m d o i n g t h e s a m e . A n d y o u c a n s t o p ti n* e n e m y w i t h a s q u e e z e o f a t r i g g e r a n d a s p l a t t e r o f p a i n t . A m e r i c a ’ s f a s t e s t g r o w i n g s p o r t ... m a y be t h e a d v e n ­ t u r e o f v o u r l i f e ! s í u v í y v i . - C a ll :U fi-929:t Some of the brightest smiles in town come from the A Center for General D entistry A Oral Hygiene CLEANING AND DENTAL CHECK-UP FOR $28.00 A CENTER FOR GENERAL DENTISTRY AND ORAL HYGIENE Ed Fomby, D.D.S. Larry Lindsey, D.D.S. Two Locations 1605 West Ave. 473-2125 Charles Snow, D.D.S. Stevan Koprivnik, D.D.S. 2323 South Lamar 441-3914 This ad with student ID good for $5 off cleaning and check-up HEY HORNS! GOURMET BASKETS DELIVERED WINE ft CHEESE - SUNSHINE BASKET - A TASTEFUL ORGY - A BOUNTIFUL BATH - A TASTE OF TEXAS - MACHO MUNCHIES HOW ’80UT “A MORNING AFTER BASKET’ WITH A BUZZARD AND BALLOONS SAYING "YOU WERE GREAT LAST NIGHT.” ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW AT BALLOON BOUTI&UE 451-0047 STILL THE CUTEST BALLOONS AND BALLOON-A-GRAMSM TOWN! WOMEN'S REFERRAL CENTER FREE PREGNANCY TESTS CONFIDENTIAL COUNSELING PREGNANCY ALTERNATIVES INFORMATION and REFERRALS 476-6878 2404 Rio Grande SMocks west -U T cm ^ ib J Pretenders' concert energetic, fun By LISA BROWN-RICHAU Forget the stories you've heard about the Pretenders Chrissie Hynde, that she's softened since the birth of her daughter Natalie, that the band has lost its snap because of a change of band personnel The Pretenders stormed the City Coliseum Friday night with the ur­ gency and vitality that catapulted it into fame in the first place The rea­ son for its continued success is ob vi­ ous: Chrissie Hynde. Though two key members have been replaced. Hynde was and still is the leader of the band, the nucleus of its sound She is a superb singer, writer, player — and showman Wearing tight, leather pants on her lithe body, she strutted across the stage with Big City bravado, her dark, shaggy hair hanging in her eyes. Though Hynde com m ands the stage self-assuredly, she never los­ es the streak of vulnerability and sensuality that ultimately makes her approachable and warm This w om ­ an is no bitch: she’s simply a woman in control. And a woman with a sense of humor When she sings ‘‘You're the pits of the world, her voice is filled with a laughing sort of pity. Martin Chambers, the band s orig­ inal drummer, played energetically, plugging into each song the heavy backbeat that serves as the founda­ tion for Pretenders music Together, Chambers and Hynde ensured a good show. The new members are competent musicians, but like new step-parents taking over a family, it’s not easy to fit in without being noticed. The new guitarist, Robbie McIntosh, doesn’t play like James Honeyman-Scott, but he at least had a feel for the old songs Honeym an-Scott’s solo work always becam e a part of a song, flowing with — not overpowering — its melody McIntosh's solos were the more pronounced, rock-guitar-solo genre. The new typical of THE MOVIE STORE Video Sales & Rentals WE SPECIALIZE IN: • CLASSICS «WESTERNS • SCI-FI «MUSIC • DISNEY A vailable On VHS-CED-BETA FORMAT VCR's, VDP’s, VIDEO CAMERAS FOR RENT N M H N N 4301-A Guadalupe Mon.-Sat. 11-8 453-1237 • TW O FOR O NE O VER N IG H T M O VIE RENTAL A WITH THIS AD • • offer expires 3-24-64 John Doe 111 Easy Street Austin, Tx 77555 Pay to the order of__ CASH WRITE CHECKS for CASH OR MONEY ORDERS AT C.R. SERVICES!! Stop by our office in the plaza at 4501 Guadalupe to pick up an application or for more information CALL 454-7758 Les L. C rane, DDS Inc. Jo sep h A. Murphy DDS General Dentistry . T ' ■ ..-TfCv - rjrtfSsk bass player also played formidably, though he was a rather boring stage presence. Hynde’s voice was in perfect shape, faltering only during a clipped attempt at the ending har­ monies on the Chain “ Back on G ang” with McIntosh The group d id n ’t sound like it had spent much time rehearsing With a nod of her head, Hynde would stretch songs an extra measure The Pretenders cut loose, injecting the show with the spunky spontaneity that makes for good concerts When bands are calculatingly perfect, you might as well listen to the album IT’S NOT JUST DUCK SOUP! IT’S OMELETTES, BREAKFAST, SOUPS, AND SALADS. FRIENDS AND FAMILY AUSTIN, TEXAS 4811 BURNET RD. 7 A M -10 PM 453-506 2 Special Student Offer: Free Cleaning with Exaa (with this ad, expires May 7, 1984) UT STUDENTS & FACULTY SURGERY - • Insurance assignment after first visit • Payment by parent accepted • Nitrous Oxide Analgesia • Audio-visual relaxation technique transplants, impacted wisdom teeth ORTHODONTIC: Services include “ Invisible Braces” Evening Appointments accepted 452-6405 nI 3800 Speedway implants, mSrme ■ F o r am appoimtmemt o r m ore Imformatiom cmtt 4 5 2 -6 4 0 5 B 12 Images Monday, March 19,1984 ccNOBODY BEATS OUR EGGS!” f ™Ki Di OSE HAPPY HOUR TILL 7 P.M. DOUBLES FOR THE PRICE OF SINGLES 50C OFF BEER 9 A R S N E H S >> ^jfcj LADIES SPECIAL FREE BAR DRINKS SUN-THURS 8-10 2 lor 1 Bar Drinks lor a ll Ladies 10-closing 2 00 p.m. till 2 00 a m Mon thru Thur PARONERS 3 FOR 1 PRICE Happy Hour 11 00 a m -7 00 p m and a ll day Sunday PARDNERfi % ' * % rmm9 * $1.00 MARGARITAS Sunday 12 noon-2 00 a m 5 0 * BLOODY MARYS Sat. and Sun tUl 2 00 p m PA RD N ERg DoUar Night 8-9 FREE DRINKS 9-10 50C Drinks 8-10pm Tuesday Night PA RD N ERg 504 Bar Drinks 8-10 $1.00 Longnecks 8-10pm Thursday night PA RD N ERg W n k e n d After Hours: 2:00 a.m .-4:00 a.m . Friday and Saturday Located in the Riverside Plaza Shopping Center near H.E.B. 2237 E. Riverside Dr. (East oí IH-35) Phone 443*5011 I fl C£C sales begin February 21 public sales begin February 27 Tickets a.a abe at the p AC Ev> r Center arc a Hastings Northcross Mail. Joskes. Paramount Theatre. Sears, Southwest Texas State Ur versT* and Fort mc.cc Information 471-1444 Charqe-a-Ticket. 477-6060. No cameras No recorders s Performing Arts Center. College of Fine Arts. The University of Texas at Aust.r A M out!e’$ ftGTirUE B A R A G R I L L E 311 East 6th 472-9245 HAPPY HOUR $5.00 DRINK ALL U CAN! 6-8 Mon.-Fri. Monday — March 19 TOMAS RAMIREZ The Jazzmanian Devil Tuesday — March 20 SHANNON AND THE STRANGERS Wednesday — March 21 MOTION JAZZ Thursday— March 22 thru Sunday— March 25 jazz with NO COMPROMISE 1983 Tony Award Nominee ■ BEST MUSICAL Della reese ' c o s c ''o * ^ g le o s ix x is im a g in a tive o n d b e a u tifu lly su n g ‘ — The He* Yori Times ♦ i n I I II ♦ Sunday-Monday, March 18-19 8pm, Performing Arts Center Concert Hall Public: $14, $12, $10, $8&$5 CEC 7 senior citizens. $10.50, $9, $7.50, $6 404 Highland Mail Blvd. 451-1711 (IV C b c s e e s t>eg r t e b 'u o rv ?C T c k e b a v a o b ie a * th e P A C E rw in C e n te r a^c 3' u ’ "r M outlets " lo fm o t .o r 4 ’ l ’ 444 í* i a r ge o T eke* 4^7-6060 N c c a m e ra s N o - e c o rd e rs Presen ted bv ’b e P A C on d the * e io s U n io n C u l'u r a [nte^o nmen' Corrm bee P p . - - . - a -^ ' e - ' e - C o lle g e o ' f i e A rts The :J n .v e rS'tv o f T exas o t A j s h n A Sane Stueetteee % PRICE SALE Qt South, and Dahri of Kick s North 477”70b8 1700 Lavaca V- - J J A M E S GERARD p h o to g r a p h e r F A S H I O N / G L A M O U R C O M M E R C I A L / P R O M O T I O N A L ( 5 1 2 ) 4 4 5 - 6 3 3 7 Monday, March 19,1984 Imago* 13 1204 W e st 6th Street 2 Block s W e st of Lam ar In P ec a n S q u a re 476 2291 cinema Mermaid movie funny story about love, society, politics Hanfcs play* the mermaid's Newcomer Daryl Hannah plays the mysterious water woman. CHECK THIS ACTION I found 5 Mongoose 26” Kos Outers 400 wh§e they last Laguna 18 Speed Mt. Bikes $375 Reg. $440 Laguna 1 Speed Steal Wheels $220 Reg. $235 Aloy Wheels $250 Reg. $265 U m j m m We Got What You Bike AUSTIN CRUZER BICYCLE SHOP :620W.34th 452*6864 Scoyée? re s the new w ay to m eet the riy h t person... .without the fe a r o f rejection. For further Information coll 444-2212 or pick up the brochure at any local Safeway Store. Single Support System, Inc. f$ J § 10% Off w/UTID M-W only 3/ 19-3/21 ByTOMMAURSTAD “ Splash ': directed by Ron How­ ard; starring Tom Hanks, John Can­ dy, Eugene Levy and Daryl Hannah; at the Fox and Lakehills Theatres Rating: ★ ★ ★ Ever since the “Chicken of the Sea" commercials I've had a thing for mermaids. I guess it was the way their hair hung over their chests like they had eyes Whatever the reason, I found myself irrationally excited about seeing this movie about a man falling in love with a mermaid. Of course, there are other, more tangible reasons to be optimistic about “Splash." First, there's Ron Howard As a director, Howard has timing and impressive displayed comedic sensibilities. (If his last film, “ Night Shift,” didn't do it, “ Splash" will surely establish him as a genuine and consistent talent.) The film also features some of the funniest talent working today: John Candy, whose every wheeze is hysterical: Tom Hanks, whose character on televi­ sion's “ Bosom Buddies” was one of the funniest running performances in years; and Eugene Levy, whose sense of w ha t’s w eird often overwhelms his sense of what’s fun­ ny. Many of the same writers and production crew from the delightful “ Night Shift" also worked on this film. "Splash" more than fulfilled my hopes about mermaids. found myself not just in love with a mer­ maid, but with the whole movie. Like many (“ Angel," “ Risky Business" and “Valley Girl," for example), “ Splash" overcomes its dangerously stupid pretenses and the inevitable doomsday predic­ tions that haunt its release and be­ comes a thoroughly entertaining movie. recent movies I Mon -Fri. 10-6:30 - Sat 10-6 706-W 29th 474-0980 -f V - k ► ? 4 * I | ; : :v: SUNDAY • MONDAY 2 f o r 1 D rin k s Until M i d n i g h t 75c Beer and Wine . . . . ; * . . * : * .. . ./• . / ; % V;\VV‘.VV ‘ ’ 'V ‘ ' ' n l C C . V j V : « i c n I V Y LAD»* N t T E 2 5 B o ( dW^ne 7 V : V . - . - . . . j , a , . .... ...... J Ü S Ó A * * 0 . v . , é 40 f * éo ' * ‘o • o t o f < V * . . * g A * W * « * f , 4 * * t 4 • » A - • « » 4 ' * : >/:: ^v;v:A:v-:/: ‘A V^vV^^:V^ ^ ^»: ‘ ; v’.V* WEDNESDAY • NEW MUSIC NITF TONI GHT: ANIMAL JUSTICE TUESDAY: LEWIS A THE LEGENDS WEDNESDAY: COUPE DEVILLE THURSDAY: COMMANDOES FRI DAY: ALTER EGO SATURDAY: MORRIS CODE SUNDAY: W.C. CLARK BLUES 250 DRAFT 7-9 EVERY NIGHT . , i i C. — • « * t . • • , ■ • . - » • » ■ * » . • » . » » . « * • a C y j N c % * * . * V * * * * * , ; * * . : * V ; ‘ '. V * • ’ * . * ’ ’ / . V g?V‘;*v.”.V—WHERE THE NIGHTLIFE BEGINS: V ^ 7:y:: ^ y :-^35th & Guadalupe 453-9831 . M ...................................................................................... Saturday, April 14 at 8 PM $12.50, $11.50, $10.50 - Tickets on sale Tues., March 20 - 7 AM at The Erwin Center. 9 AM at Hastings Records & Tapes (Northcross Mall). 9:30 AM at Sears (Barton Creek & Hancock Center). 10 AM at Joske’s (Highland Mall), The Performing Arts Center, SW TSU Strahan Col­ iseum (San Marcos), Ft. Hood (Fiddler’s Green Rec. Center), and phones lines. Noon at The Paramount Theatre. 10 ticket limit first day of sales. NO CAMERAS. produced by UTTM CHARGE-A-TICKET: Austin 512/477-6060 60C convenience charge per ticket on all phone orders & at UTTM outlets THE O f ÍÍX4S 4 T 4U$T.r< BPVfgBSm F0 4 N K E fW lN CENTER AT AIL UTTM O U U f T l 26 Images Monday, March 19,1984 WED. MARCH 14th BENEFIT FOR MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS FREE IB * , WINE, BAR DUNKS FOR EVERYONE B-Tlpm Support our ugly bartender! B B B S B B B B S H SAT. MARCH 17th ST. PATRICK'S DAY PARTY FREE BEER, WINE, BAR DRINKS FOR EVERYONE 6-IOpm SUNDAY: Free Beer 8pm -2am, Pool Tournament MONDAY: Men's Appreciation Night, Free Drinks 8pm-11pm TUESDAY: Ladies Night, Free Drinks, 8pm-llpm WEDNESDAY: Ladies Night, Free Drinks, 8pm-11pm THURSDAY: Ladies Night, Free Drinks, 8pm-llpm FRIDAY: Dance Contest, Champagne to the Winners SATURDAY: Dance Contest, Champagne to the Wnners H appy H our 12 noon-8pm • Free Hors dfoeuvres 7601N. Lamar at Hwy. 183 459-4565 Luís Bunuel’s ‘Los Olvidados’ explores post-war rebellion By RICHARD STEINBERG “Los O lvidados" ( “ The Young and the Dam ned ), directed by Luis Buñuel, at 7 and 9 p.m. Tuesday at the Academ ic Center auditorium Luis Buñuel, w h o se cre a tive film career sp a n s m ore than five d e c ­ ades. is w id e ly re g a rd e d as o ne of a handful of o u tsta n d in g m asters of w orld cin e m a He b e g a n d ire c tin g in Spam in 1928. w o rkin g w ith artist S alvador Dali, and h e lp e d re vo lu ­ tionize the b o u n d a rie s of cin e m a tic p o ssib ilitie s w ith his d e b u t w ork ” Un C hien A n d a lo u W hen the S panish Civil W ar left him w ith o u t a h o m e ­ land, he, along w ith m any other Spaniards, live un d er F ra n c o s F ascist g o ve rn m e nt. He m oved to M exico. F rance w h e re v­ er he co u ld m ake m ovies, g reat m ovies like "E xte rm in a tin g Angel. J o u r," "D ia ry of a C h a m b e rm a id ," "T h e D is c re e t Charm of the B o u rg e o isie " and “ That O b scu re O b |e c t of D esire B elle d e refu se d to It was d u rin g this p o st-w a r p e rio d that A m e rican film m a ke rs b e g a n to exam ine the u p -a n d -c o m in g g e n e ra ­ tion of reb e lliou s youth In 1955. H o l­ lyw ood relea se d "B la c k b o a rd J u n ­ g le " and "R e b el W ithout a C a u se ," two film s that c a p tu re d the rising tu r­ b u le n ce of A m e rica 's youth A fter b attling the m id d le -c la s s in “ R e b e l” and his “ East of E den." Jam es Dean b e ca m e an o v e rn ig h t role in cult hero The now "yo u n g e r g e n e ra ­ tion b e g an to a d o p t ha b its foreign to their parents, one in p a rticu la r was rock and roll, re fle cte d in film s of the late 1950s su ch as “ Rock. Pretty B a b y !", “ H igh School C o n fid e n tia l1 and “ The Girl C a n ’t H e lp It.” Well, th a t's how H o llyw o o d p re ­ sented reb e lliou s youth and juvenile d e lin q u e n ts in the 1950s H ow ever, H o llyw o o d 's p o rtra ya l w a sn 't the only version — en ter Buñuel, w ho had his own id e a s a b o ut w ild youth B u n u e l’s w as a talent that se e m in g ly took a new d ire ctio n ea ch d e c a d e but the m om ent he hit his strid e and b e g an to a ttra ct the attention that w ould fo cu s on him for the rest of his ca re e r w as in 1950, w hen as one of a num ber of low b u d g e t film s he w as d ire ctin g in M exico, he m ad e the in­ ternational cla ssic, “ Los O lv id a d o s The film, w h ich w ent on to w in an aw ard for Best D ire ctio n at the 1951 C annes Film Festival, m arke d a d e fi­ nite tu rn in g point for the d irecto r, and from that p o in t on, he had e ffe c ­ tively e m b a rk e d on ano th e r film c a ­ reer In co n tra st W hat w as the d iffe re n ce in Bunu- to a el's a p p ro a c h 7 the m ost reb e lliou s Jam es Dean, “ Los O lviva d o s," a in ch a ra cte r young, to u g h and b u llin g punk nam ed Jaibo. is h a rd ly soe m o n e that an a u d ie n ce c o u ld rally b e h in d. He is, in fact, reb e lliou s a g a in st e v e ry ­ one and e ve ryth in g He is loyal to no fe a rfu lly one. not even to the m e m b e rs of his re sp e ct him ga n g w ho W hereas D ean's ch a ra c te r had a fo l­ lowing, Ja ib o w as the e p ito m e of the loner. Based on a ctu al e vents and p e o ­ ple and set in the slum s of M exico City, "L o s O lv id a d o s ” w as the first in a series of B u n u e l’s film s w h e re the g o o d gu ys alw ays got c ru c ifie d Film c ritic M anny F arber has d e s c rib e d Buñuel s m ain them e d u rin g this p e ­ riod: “ M ost of his stories — th e y're a bout fall guys: it's B u n u e l's theory that if you w ant to b e g o o d , w a tch ' O ne of his latter M exican out works. 10 fo l­ years after lowed the sam e pa ttern V iridiana, a nun w ho d e d ic a te d her life to h e lp ­ ing the poor, is a tta c ke d and rap e d by those she had been h e lp in g The is the p rem ise in “ Los O lv id a d o s " sam e — nothing is too cruel, too im ­ m oral. too intense — a nd evil usually de fea ts g o o d “ Los O lvid a d o s “ V irid ia n a ." relea se d B ecause B unuel's exa m in a tio n of this tu rb u le n t g e n e ra tio n is so unlike that of H o llyw o o d 's, those of you w ho h a ve n ’t e xp e rie n c e d his p o in t of view should try m ake it m ake it to this scree n in g , one in a series of Bunu- el's w orks p re se n te d by C inem aT ex- as The series co n tin u e s next m onth w ith “ El" two m ore of his w orks, (“ The Strange P a ssio n ") on A pril 2 and “ The Phantom of L ib e rty " on A pril 9 British film series at Laguna Gloria shows art-for-art’s sake filmmaking By KENNETH WRIGHT Foreign film s are often th o ug h t of as high bro w e n terta in m e n t H ig h ­ brow b e c a u se who but a b u n c h of o ste n ta tio u s , p s e u d o in te lle c tu a ls w ould try to stru g g le th ro u g h com plex m essa g e laden plot lines a id ­ ed only by s u b title s that flash acro ss the bottom of the s c re e n 7 It’s a frustra tin g e x p e rie n c e be cause fo re ig n film m a ke rs m ake m ov ies m uch diffe re n t from their A m e ri­ can co u n te rp a rts. W estern E uropean film m akers tend to p la ce a gre a te r e m p h a sis on so cia l issues W hether the p unk sce n e the the w orking cla s s life fem inism mvesti ga tio ns of a e s th e tics and p o litic s or post a p o c a ly p tic life e a ch is treated even h a n d e d ly issue is film m a ke rs revolutionary The rea so n 7 M oney M ost w estern E uropean c o u n trie s sp o n sor film co m m issio n s that s u b s id iz e n o vice the and film m akers don t have to w orry about profit the way m a p r stu d io film m ak ers m ust M ajor stu d io s usually fund only those film s that g u a ra n te e com m ercial s u cc e ss State fu n d e d film co m m issio n s how ever are m ore c o n ce rn e d with film as art There fore they fund the art form for its own sake re g a rd le ss of its com rner cial viability A series of film s c o m m issio n e d by one of these o rg a n iza tio n s, the Brit ish Film Institute (BFI), d e b u ts F riday and runs th ro u g h A p ril 7 at the L a g u ­ na G loria M useum . The en tire series con sists of in d e p e n d e n t British film s p ro d u c e d be tw e en 1951 a nd 1982 like film s of The early '50s w ere a tim e w hen a g ro w in g n u m b e r of British film m a k­ ers be q am e d iss a tis fie d w ith the B rit­ ish film in d u stry The Free C inem a m ovem ent resulted Led by such British film lu m inaries as L in d sa y A n ­ derson Karel Reisz. John F letcher and W alter Lassally, the Free C in e ­ the F rench ma m ovem ent a llo w e d film m a ke rs to New W ave d irect usin g any they te ch n iq u e s w anted The M om m a D o n ’t A llo w " and the Free C inem a m ovem ent fe a ture d in the B FI’s re ­ tro sp e ctiv e in clu d e " 0 D re a m la n d ." “ N ice Time All three d e a l with working class p e o p le A c c o rd in g to Lindsay, until this tim e the w o rkin g c la ss w ere b e in g d e p ic te d in m ost B ritish film s as "c h ie fly co m ic, w h e re they are not v illa in o u s " “ M om m a Don’t Allow" portrays the e m e rg in g youth cutture in a working by sh o w in g a n ig h t class n e ig h b o rh o o d jazz c lu b The other tw o film s show the average Briton in an a ve ra g e leisure p u rsu it N ice Tim e a nd its P ic c a d illy C ircu s night of m id d le cla s s e s ca p ism , d e ­ p icts B ritons in a w arm , re sp e ctfu l if not slig h tly o ve rly h u m a n istic m a n ­ ner. into A rea listic rep re se n ta tio n of the the w o rkin g cla ss co n tin u e d film m a kin g of the 1970s and 1980s. "D o w n The C o rn e r" utilizes am ateur a cto rs to fo llo w the lives of five a d o ­ lescent boys There are no rom a n tic film p re ­ intonations, sents a vivid rep re se n ta tio n of the boys' d e su ltory, rather e m p ty lives instead, this in “ A n g e l re tro s p e ctiv e Fem inism is also a p o p u la r to p ic in the the H ouse" show s a yo u n g w om an trying to b re a k out of the co n v e n tio n ­ al fem ale role. "M aeve" treats fe m in ­ ism in a m ore s u b tle m anner M aeve S w eeney is a C a th o lic w ho leaves Belfast for London. U p o n her return to Belfast, she fa ce s p o litica l q u e s ­ tions from frie n d s and fam ily In the last of the fem inist g ro u p , "A n im a tion for Live A c tio n ” director Vera Neu- bauer uses the T h u rb e re sq u e tech­ nique of h a vin g an anim ated im a ge of the heroine act out her fantasies. The BFI retrospective also ex­ p lo re s politics, which is the basis of both "At the Fountainhead" and “Be­ fore Hindsight." The latter examines the political realities thafl «rere pres­ ent m Britain during the 1930s. ones that glossed over the rise of the Third Reich and the Nazi atrocities. This film features a collection of a c ­ tual new sreels p la ye d in British mov- See 'British füms,’ page 17 Monday, March 19,1984 Imago» 15 TEETH AND THE HEART An abscessed tooth causes high fe­ ver and toxicity w hich can move through the body. If the patient has a history of heart valve problems or rheumatic fever, he or she may de­ velop a heart condition called ' en­ docarditis." This is an inflam m a­ tion of the lining of the heart and its valves and can be fatal. Since abscessed teeth are usual­ ly the result of extensive decay, the best protection against endocar­ ditis and other complications aris­ ing from mouth infections is proper diet, oral hygiene, and intelligent dental care. Presented as a public service by Dr. Ralph). Branch, D .D .S., P.C. 2907 Duval O ffice Phone 472-5633 24 hr. Emergency 443-1861 A POSITIVE SMILE by Dr. Ralph Branch Q . Is there any relationship between health of teeth and the heart? A . A tooth abscess or infection is like­ ly to affect ANY organ of the body if the infection is neglected and permitted to travel. For that reason, any illness or symptom involving teeth should get the same prompt and careful attention given to other medical disorders. Reproductive Services MEMBER NATIONAL ABORTION FEDERATION CONFIDENTIAL COUNSELING & SERVICES FOR: • Free Pregnancy Testing • Pregnancy Termination • information and Referrals • Professional Medical Services AUSTIN MEDICAL BLDG. RR SHUTTLE 10 0 9 E. 40th 458-8274 _____ ______________ ___ travel Even odds on a good time: wagering in Nuevo Laredo By JOSEPH KENNEDY FACE TO FACE Face it. That's how you deal with people, face to face. That s why it's important to give yourself the self-confidence that comes from knowing that you look your best. At Halina European Skin Care we know the needs of today s cultivated women and men. That's why we provide a relaxing environment where you can escape' — and come out looking And we maintain a standard of excellence, professionalism and integrity that few Skin Care Salons in this country can your best. match. We offer: Individualized treatment for all types of skin and skin problems; Regenerating treatments for hands; European manicures and pedicures; Hair removal by waxing or electro­ lysis; Closing of broken capillaries; Makeup design, applica­ tion and instruction; Eyebrow shaping; Brow and lash color- ing. All to help you put your best face forward. V HALINA ¡ H O C ! EUROPEAN SKIN CARE S U n l S4CH Clay Avenue • Austin • (SI 2) 452-35Ó0 4 I I H 28 years experience in W arsaw . Paris, V ie n n a ___ Laredo. The name conjures im ag­ es of wild abandon, drunken brawls, illicit sex, extreme poverty, cheap trinkets and horse and dog racing the Horse and dog racing? Yes, the to sport of kings has come streets of Laredo. Well, maybe not the streets, and maybe not even technically in Lare­ do, but Nuevo L a re d o — just across the border — does have a new $20 million racing facility. Horse racing is held every Saturday and Sunday throughout the year. But for those on a quick dodge from the rigors of o b ­ taining a college education, and on a limited budget as my companion and I were, there is but one answer — the dogs. Los perros (the dogs) run 7:30 to 10:30 p.m Thursday through Sun­ day — leaving plenty of time to sam­ ple that have brought thousands of naive college lads and lasses to this border town for generations. the other delights The bright lights of the complex can be seen for miles, far outshining the half-hearted attempts of the streetlights in town. The track is sev­ en miles due south of the border. If you’re driving, just follow the signs, but there are buses from the border that leave every 30 minutes. The race track is new and modern, contrasting sharply with the sur­ rounding environment. Completed a year ago, these facilities offer every­ thing a new race fan could possibly need The grandstand is glass-en­ cased, and food is everywhere The bars, of course, lie in abundance. In these, a healthy cuba libre can be purchased for $1, American. You could claim to come to the races for many high-minded ideals the thrill of competition, the inspiring sight of watching beautifully stream­ lined animals at their best, the tradi­ tion and history of a sport that dates back centuries. All pageantry aside, however, people go to the races to bet. That's right, unlike its immediate neighbor to the north, Mexico allows parimutuel betting — and there’s nothing like the thrill of cheering for No 4 in the sixth race because you have a $2 ticket that will pay high dividends if he wins Betting, however, is not simply putting your money down on the dog m the green stripes One must use strateqy The experienced bettor knows every dog s tendencies how well he ran in his last race, whether he starts or finishes strong, what weight handicap he carries and a few hundred other things that only an expert or handler would know Fortunately, for novices such as my com padre and myself, there is the racing form — an little magazine that lists every race, the history of every dog and the odds he's racing under. Unfortunately, the forms are rather hard to decipher, so realizing our limitations, we enlisted the services of our resident expert — Carlos, the bartender ingenious After receiving a five-minute les­ son on reading the forms, we retreat­ ed to an empty table to plot our strat­ egy I was now ready to make my first bet. Wading up to the window, I placed $2 on Paji’s Choice, to win, at five two odds. My com padre chose a loser called Deena Faye, going off at seven to two odds — a dog of a bet if I ever saw one. Forti­ fied with two more cuba libres, we found our seats among the strangely quiet spectators. to The crowd was separated into three distinct classes The serious bettors, who never watch the live event, hovered around the conven­ iently placed television monitors in the grandstand area. The serious bettors with dates sat and watched the race, but diverted their eyes to the monitors whenever possible. Those like us, not knowing what they were doing but possibly the only group enjoying themselves, took in the real thing. Post time. The dogs are led out to 16 Imagos Monday, March 19,1964 the patriotic strains of Bridge Over the River Kwaf ’ — a catchy tune but one that becom es a little overbear­ ing by the last race, three hours lat­ er The dogs are placed in their re­ the spective starting boxes and announcer gives the preliminaries The trumpet sounds and nothing! Out of the corner of my eye, I catch the quick movement of the small electric the track to where the dogs are housed As he passes, the gates open and a roar erupts from the crowd — they're off' rabbit racing around It was such a surprise to see the beasts burst from the start that I couldn't find my charge at first Then he revealed himself, moving up on the outside, No. 6 on the form, Paji s Choice He was running smoothly, strong stride, neck muscles bulging Heading into the final turn, a cha l­ lenger moves up inside and forces Paji wide What injustice this? Who is interloper that flies down the this stretch to win by a solid two lengths, while my carefully chosen mongrel — not to mention my $2 investment — fades out of sight? The scoreboard shows No. 4 to be the winner I tear into my racing form to see how I missed choosing this m agnificent racing machine. The name opposite No. 4 is none other than my friend’s chosen one, Deena Faye He has no idea he has won, so I offer the joyous news. I figured his winnings to be minimal at seven to two odds, but clutch my heart in jealous anguish as the teller doles out numerous $20 bills to him Feeling a sudden need for a cuba libre injection, I pushed my former friend toward the bar. This and all subsequent rounds would be on him. After all, the mam risk you take at the races is not losing your money — it's what you do with it after you win. X A 23 D iffe re n t S ubs F rench o r W h o le W h e a t B re a d © S u n .-T h u rs . 11 a m - m id n ig h t 1914 Guadalupe F ri. 4 Sot. 11 a m -2 a m _____476-1215_____ , ( Austin's Home of the Blues ) Students FREE MON.-THURS. with I.D. Monday Blues Party Always HOT!! Best in Blues M el Brown, Paul Ray, Sarah Brown, Joe Sublett, G eorge Rains, Denny Freeman tu es. m a r c h 20 - Charlie Sexton V and The Eager Beaver Boy»' plus Responsible Johnny WED. 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MAR. 22 I AUSTIN OPERA HOUSE ¡ ¡ | 1 2 0 0 ACADEMY Tickets now all Hastings Records Inner Sanctum,W aterloo Records + Austin Opera House. Phorj£ I ¡ ¡ | | | %iiiiiiiniiiiiiiiS limmi límiínímimiiiiSiSifi Í iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiih iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii = UNIVERSAL AMUSEMENT ADULT THEATRES T h e f m e tt tn A dult M o tio n P ictu re E n tertain m en t u THE WORD IS OUT: “Private Pleasures—a realdoozy of a movie! Adrienne Plushette is Marilyn Chambers' sister-in-sin. She may well be today's best X-rated actress. But I don't think she's a c t i n g ! " — Critic's Choice & R E B E L D R I V E I N 6 9 0 2 B u rle s o n Rd. PH. 3 8 5 -7 2 1 7 O R IG IN A L /U N C U T A D U L T S ON LY I TARA, TARA (X) EAVENLY N U R S E (X STARTS 7:00 R ad io Sound S ystem w - j Private Pleasures of a Woman ® starring A d r i e n n e P l u s h e t t e • J ill F la x o n • J u li e D u r e e Sftecial Guest Star Vanilla Joy • in c olor • adults only ClNfMA ‘WEsT 2130 S Conaress • Open 1 1 a m • 442 5 719 PLUS: “CHARLI” x FJ. LINCOLN p r e s e n t s ANNA VENTURA, TIFFANY CLARK, LISA DELEEUW a n d SHARON KANE i n o n e o f t h e b e s t e r o t i c f i l m s e v e r m a d e i “THE OUI GIRLS” x T E X A S : I 2224 GUADALUPE • 478-4504 : p l u s : “t h e f il t h y r ic h ” * ; & c ° Produced by PA C E Concerts. LIVE IN CONCERT COURTYARD & BAR Free parking after 5 and all day on weekends at Seventh & T rinity or Seventh & San Jacinto X 310 East 6th I B r i t i s h film s /c o n tin u e d from page 15 ie theaters “At the Fountamhead” joins both fact and fiction Set in the 1970s, the story concerns the proposed publi­ cation of a book on currently prospering Nazis By making the book's publication a central dram at­ ic theme, a British critic said. “ They to pose questions are also able about the current state of fascism in Germany The other four films in the retros­ pective are not easily categorized One such film is “ Rough Cut And Ready Dubbed," a blown-up 8mm documentary on the British punk scene in 1979-80 Filmed by two teenagers with the flexibility that a Super 8mm camera gives. “ Rough Cut” takes a stark and vivid look at the punk culture In "The Falls” d i­ rector Peter Greenberg presents an even more bizarre culture This mov­ ie takes place after a Violent Unex- plaineo Event (VUE) has occurred victimizing 19 million people The VUE results in the creation of 92 new languages and two more sexes Ninety-two "victim s” of the VUE are interviewed in this film The third film, Bill Douglas’ auto­ biographical trilogy, has been called one of the top achievem ents in nar­ rative cinema of the 1970s Utilizing an amateur actor Douglas chroni­ cles his own childhood via his alter ego Jamie from the poverty-stricken mining village of Edinburgh in the mid-1940s, through a world of de pri­ vation, neglect and absence, to mili­ tary service in Egypt "Crystal G azing," written and di­ rected by critic/film makers Laura Mulvey and Peter Wollens is the newest and arguably the most eso­ teric of the group Wollens describes it as poised between Brecht and Breton and with rock and roll and foreign theory providing the back­ bone The film was a project taken on to escape what Wollens calls the “ nightmare of independent film for Independent What Wollens means is confusing As a medium that has given birth to some of the most innovative cinema today, it would be a tragedy if fund­ ing film sources dries up And if com mercial success becomes a necessity for funding many of the films that are part of this BFI retrospective would never have been made. Take some time out over the next month and see some films made for art's sake — T O U R D E F O R C E 1984 — SPECIAL GUEST GOLDEN EARRING Sat,, March 3 1 - 8 PM $11.50 & $10.50 - Tickets on sale now at The Erwin Center & U T T M outlets: Hasting’s Records & T apes (Northcross Mall), Sears (Barton Creek Mall & Hancock Center), Jo sk e ’s (Highland Mall), Paramount Theatre, Performing Arts Center, SW T SU Strahan C o lis e u m , & Ft. Hood (Fiddler’s Green Rec. Center). N O CA M ERA S. U T T M C H A R G E -A T IC K E T : 512 47 7 -6 0 6 0 6 0 « co n v en ie n ce ch arge per tick et on all phon e o rd e r* & at U TT M ou tlet* 607 MLK at Nueces j a r g ■ j r uffrTOSiTK of nx4S 4T a u s t i h 477-1239 T H E FTV4NK CENTER TICKKTS A V A IL A M .I AT ALL UTTM O U T L IT S Monday, March 19,1984 Images 17 ITALIAN RENAISSANCE, CIRCA 1984 Discover this emerging new collection of exciting sportswear from Italy, for women and men. NOW OPEN IN HIGHLAND MALL & beneffon & beneflon & oeneflon O m u i ' i i i a ^ Breakfast, etc. Mon 7 am— 3 pm Tue-Thurs 7 am— 9 pm Fn & Sat 7 am— 4 r i d Sun 7 am—9 pm |j| £ 2304 LAKE AUSTIN BLVD. 478-8645 You Are W hen You Eat 4É PRECISION CUT $10 SHAMPOO INCLUDED l Ue cut it the un you íihe it CALL NOW...WALK-INS WELCOME ’ RIVERSIDE PLAZA 444-0470 OAK HILL PLAZA 288-1812 *ON SHUTTLE ROUTE PRICES VALID THRU 3/14/84 WITH THIS AD ’ REAGAN SQUARE 451-3068 VISA TKYTHUNB DESE PEOPLE THATCANCO) IS UNBEATABLE Everyone in this picture shares something in com­ mon. They’ve all had cancer, and are leading happy, nor­ mal lives. How you live may save your life. m IGANCER SOOETY* This space contributed as a public service music Scorpions “Love At First Sting’’ Cyndi Lauper “She’s So Unusual’’ Heavy metal has never been strong enough to stand on its own it’s always needed a gim m ick A number of self-proclaim ed head- bangin' bands," such as Black Sab­ bath, regularly resort to quasi-intel- lectual occult worship to try to make up for the music's lack of interest A second echelon of groups goes for the tried and true exploitation-of It is to this second women theme group that the Scorpions belong, and it's a tribute to the lack of taste in America lately that bands like this can actually make a living This German group has over the years authored some of the most vi­ ciously sexist music in the history of rock, with the worst offender being 1976’s "Virgin Killer" (the cover of which was banned in America in a rare display of good sense) This time out, it offers yet another loud, petulant and perfectly execrable set of songs celebrating such simple pleasures as tying your woman up and perhaps slapping her around a bit if she won’t cooperate “ Rock You Like A Hurricane" is typical enough: "The bitch is hungry/ She needs to tell/ So give her inches/ And feed her w e l l E l s e w h e r e , the group tries its hand at some populist wisdom with "C rossfire,” a laughably inept plea for the unity of mankind. This album contains some incredi­ bly vile stuff. — DAVID MENCONI Versatility and a good attitude will go a long way and both are in abun­ dance on Cyndi Lauper's delightfully quirky, aptly titled debut album When everyone else on the radio seems to be going out of their way to project gloom, schizophrenic dance- it-off apathy or anthemic self-righte­ ousness, to hear someone sum it up with the simple "Girls just want to have fun refreshing it’s As far as versatility goes Lauper wears many hats on this album from the working-class party girl of "Girls Just Want To Have Fun" to the tough chick m "Money Changes Every­ thing" to the vulnerable country-pop singer of “ Time After Time She even adds an oddball touch of her own to Prince's "When You Were M in e ," d e a d -p a n n in g her way through the song without the exp ect­ ed gender switch Lauper possesses an interesting w arbling voice, with an impressive vocal range that’s very expressive at both ends Thus, she can skitter through semi-silly like "She-Bop" and "He's So Unusual, sounding as carefree as a little girl playing. little ditties But she can turn around and hit sincere notes of quivering emotion with “ Time After Time," one of her own com positions that sounds as if it was written from the heart. Seldom has sensitive vulnerability been put across so believably without lapsing into maudlin sentiment This is pop DAVID music with a difference MENCONI Modem English “Ricochet Days’’ Modern English has always been something of an oddity The group started out as just another face in the crow d during the late 70s British record contract punk explosion By the time it finally in 1981. got a though, it had slicked things up con­ siderably, and last year s "After The Snow” had a monster hit, "I Melt With You ” But that hit was atypical of the rest China Oardtn New & Classy Chinese Restaurant Lunch, Dinner, Cocktails “China Garden, a sampler of Chinese cuisine, menu offers good taste of regional cooking style.”*** Rated ★★★By Susan Brownlee Special to the American-Statesman “Small, new or offbeat places to try" Feb. Texas Monthly 1 Welcome to China Garden ” ( H I N A C A R P E S p r o u d ly b r in g a y o u th e m o a t u n iq u e g o u r m e t d in in g en p e n e n r e i n th e o f f i c ia l c a p it a l o f T e x a s O u r H u n a n c u m in * , fe a t u r in g h ig h ly r e d p e p p e r e d d ia b a a a n d o t h e r im p o r t a n t r e g io n * r e p r e s e n te d o n o u r m e n u , a u c b a» S s e c h u a n . M a n d a r in . S h a n g h a i a n d ( a n io n , a r e c a r e f u lly p r e p a r e d b y M a ste r C h e f, H w a n g . a r e c ip ie n t o f a t o u r * t a r 0000 r e c o m m e n d a tio n b y th e W a s h in g U m S t a r